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About The Oregon daily journal. (Portland, Or.) 1902-1972 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 13, 1919)
A - " ' 1 ". . -He must have a long spoon that must eat with tbe devil.- Shakes- , pea re. . . i , i , ' : 1 HEALTH, BEAUTY AND THE HOMEA COMPELLING PAGE IN NEXT SUNDAY'S JOURNAL He that will not when he may, When be -would he shall have nay. John Heywood. Wllomnf$ Clubs arib 'epctetg?---: v Announcement of Wedding Is 1 a Surprise i Miss Helen McCusker and Omer ' Wells Married on Day Ahead of Schedule. (By Helen M. Hatchlsoa.) AT THE wedding- reception at the home of Mrs. George Willard Brown, at Riverside on Tuesday afternoon, an nouncement was made of the marriage of Miss Helen McCusker and Omer Mills, which was solemnized on Mon - day afternoon instead of Just previous to the reception as had been planned. The announcement caused no little stir of surprise among the assembled guests, as not even the family relatives had been informed of the wedding taking place a day sooner than had been an nounced. The service was read on Mon day afternoon at .the Grace Memorial church by the. Rev. Oswald Taylor. Summer blossoms and greenery were used about the! rooms of the Brown resi dence for the reception. Receiving with the bridal couple were the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McCusker, and her aunt, Mrs. George Willard Brown. Mrs. Joseph Wood, godmother of the bride, presided lnl the dining room. Mr. and Mrs. Mills left Portland im mediately following the reception. They will go to South Dakota, where Mr. Mills is engaged in special agricultural work. j The bride, whoj was graduated from Portland academy, is a memMr of Junior league and has been active 'n work for the War Camp Community ser vice as well as wiUi other patriotic or ganizations, her special work having Ing been with the Red Cross motor s'luad. , Following a trip to the Black Hills Mr. and Mrs. Mills wl,l -make their home near Wall, South Dakota. Lieutenant and Mrs. Clare Wallace "ooowura . (yorneua Stanley), are visitors at Gearhart at tire summer home of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. O'Brien. They will spend a few weeks in and about Portland visiting old friends be fore leaving for San Farncisco where Lieutenant Woodward will report for iuty and sail with Mrs. Woodward for Tifii Tsin. China. They have just come fnjni Rockford, 111., where the lieuten ant hatt been in service. He has recently been transferred to the 15th infantry' "Next week Lieutenant and Mrs. Wood ward will spend a few days in the city and will be the house guests of Mr. apd Mrs. J. P. O'Brien. Dr. and Mrs. H. S. Pernot of Cor vallis, accompanied by their daughter, Dorothy, were in the city Tuesday on their way to Rainier park and British Columbia, where they will motor for a fortnight. . Mrs. Grace W. .Story and young son. George JjatktnH Story, are upending a fortnight at Keavlew, Wash. 5 ,.! ( - C f Th rCnights"bf Columbus will give a complimentary dancing party Thursday evening for the entertainment of the world war veterans "t the K. of C building. Vancouver barracks. At 10:30 o'clock in the evening a special event will be staged for the entertainment of the dancers. Ladie desiring to attend may secure Cards of admission by raak irtg application at the Knights of Co lumbus club, 364 Taylor street. Cards must be presented at the door. Mitis Mary Blossom, "who has been in Halt Francisco for a number of weeks during the summer, has returned to the ciry. Miss Blossom while In the South fetudied with Miss Jane Sanders, former ly of this city. While in California Miss Blossom visited, at Aetna Springs for a short time. The wedding of Miss Vera Blanche Kelso and Gordon S. Prentice was an event of Tuesday evening at the home of the bride's parents in Irving-ton. The service was read by Dean R. T. Hicks of-, St. Stephens pro-cathedral. About 30 'of the friends and relatives of the bridal -couple were present to witness the ceremony. The bride was gowned in white taffeta and wore a large tulle hat Her flowers were white rosebuds. Miss Reba Macklin, gowned in pink and carrying pink sweet peas, was the bridesmaid. .Rodney Prentice was the bridegroom's only attendant. . Following Stomach -Miseries From Indigestion Relieved Instantly BELIEF I W TWO MINUTES PER. FECTXY HARMLESS Crippled Newsdealer Makes Friends on Fayorite Gbrner W. C , Chapln, who now sells The Journal on , the corner of Fourth, and Washington streets, worked as a car penter for many years, but the accident which cost him his leg made it Impossi ble for him to clamber over the scaf- folding and walk the top plates any longer. Therefore, about all that" was left for him to do was to sell papers. For' six years he has been on his fa vorite corner, and he has customers in growing numbers. ill yysk Ip '-"y - . lnl' A Spare Rod, Spoil Child; Declared Poor Precept - ... , i Slapping, Whipping and Spank ing of Children Condemned by Parents' Educational, Bureau W. C. Chapln, Journal news dealer at Fourth and Washington streets Do not deceive yourself Into believing that stomach miseries must be endured. It, may "be just possible that your case la not one "of. the serious kind, but that little 'uneasiness you experience after meals such as the fermentation of your food, and a constant desire to belch or that feeling as fly our stomach was : trying to burn -up, (commonly called heartburn) pains In the stomach between meals, constant rising thethings you eat, and . which, do npt properly digest, as well as fermentation which causes too much ga, w hich in turn is almost certain to bring on that fullness of feeling pecially after meals, causing you some, little distress to say nothing of its many liiiujmg leaiurea mai you are compelled to endure from poor-digestton. any and alt of these symptoms find quick relief Two Minutes, by, taking one dose of Jo-to. i a brief wedding trip to Lake Louise, Mr. and Mrs. Prentice will make their home In Seattle. 4 Mrs. J. W. Hopkins will be hostess for a lawn party at her home, 37 West Church street, on Thursday evening honoring the members of the Camelia social club. Those who will assist Mrs. Hopkins will be: Mrs. Marietta Robin son, Mrs. Hawley. Mrs. W. C. Maxwell and "Miss Mary Hay. Miss Mary Holmes left the. city Mon day for Seaview. Wash., to spend a few days visiting friends. Mrs. 'C. R. Losher and daughter of Portland are visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Emery of Ashland. ' . Mrs. R. P. Neil of Ashland is spend ing a few days in the city visiting at the homes of friends and relatives. . Miss Grace Hancock of Spokane will become the bride of Lloyd Frost of this city on September 25. The bride Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Hancock of Spokane, Mr. Frost is a civil engi- j ncer or I'ortiand. . Quaint old embroideries, gathered from Denmark and Sweden, from France and Italy, and from other parts of Eu rope, were the features, of interest at the tea given by the Arts and Crafts society at the Hoffman studios in the Barnes road Tuesday afternoon. Inter esting bronze medals cast -by famous French artists and brought from the Paris exposition were also shown. Mrs. Charles P. McCullough was hostess for the occasion. Presiding at the tea urns were Mrs. Charles" E. Wolverton and Mrs. Kdwln Caswell. Those who as sisted about the rooms were Mrs. George Norris Woodley. Mrs. Herman "BoM man. Mrs. Allen M. KUsworth. Miss Dorothy Parsons. Miss Lois Macy. Miss Barbara Lull and Miss Dorothy, San ford. i ' Utopia Rebekah lodge will entertain informally at the Orient hall on Thurs day evening. The program has been arranged by a committee of the brothers of the lodge of which E. Woertendyke is chairman. A special request is made for returned soldier members to be present. " stitutlon granting equal suffrage. Mem bers of the club will meet this evening for a swimming party at Wtndemuth. The women's auxiliary of Company F, 162d infantry, wilt give a picnic on Sat urday evening at Crystal Lake park. Dinner will be served to all members of the company and their friends. L Miss Lancefield To Have Charge of Library at ' Albina Miss Hilda Lancefield. a former resi dent of Portland, has returned to this cityjto take charge of the Albina branch library, September 1, and is temporarily in charge of the St. Johns branch. Miss Lancefield is a graduate of Whit man college and of the New York State Library school, j. She was assistant in the reference department in the library of the Kansas Agricultural college and was assistant branch librarian in the Ilrooklyn public library, Brooklyn, New York. . 9, . . Another addition to the staff of the library is Miss Marguerite Fahrln. who will be children's librarian in South Portland branch.'- he is a graduate of the Carnegie Library -school of Pitts burg for training children's librarians and has had practical training also in the libraries of Victoria and in Manitoba university and Victoria Normal school. 3 SPARING the rod does not necessar ily spoil the child, according to the pamphlet issued by the Parents' Educa tional bureau of Portland, which is Ire produced in part below. The leaflet is entitled "Stop Whipping Children," 'an open letter to parents. j "Slapping, spanking and whipping children are very common. : In more barbarous times these practices were universal. . In our day inquiry proves that most parents believe they have a right to strike children, especially small children When punishments are known to be extremely severe, neighbors and officers sometimes interfere In behalf of the victims. For one such case which becomes public there are hundreds where the parent is sole judge and witness, and there is no court of appeal, i "Any discussion of corporal punish ment is almost sure to include the false statement that 'the Bible says "Spare the rod and spoil the child." ' The Bible concordance contains references to rods and to whipping. But the quo tation 'everybody has heard and many have quoted is not from the Bible, but from Hudibras, a humorous poem written in 1663 by Samuel Butler. "Consider the difference in size be tween a parent and a young child. If a giant 10. or 12 feet tall stood oi-er a man or woman and dealt out blows for infractions of giant made rules, ttte parent might realize what he now does to children. He probably does hot know either the pain, the physical In jury, . the nerves shock, the mental effects, nor the 'effects upon the other children In the family. The effect upon the mother or father is another subject. "The pain is greater than a grown person realizes. The injury to the heart is sometimes permanent. The nervous effects are such that the same child frequently offends again within an hour. Feelings of bitterness, hatred' and even revenge rankle in the heart. : The fear in the mind of the .victim and -of the other children is wjiotly bad. Parental control that is wise and ood cultivates a child's self-respect, as well as respect of parents. Whipping is destructive of self-respect." Betsy Ross Tent No. 1. Daughters of Union Veterans of the Civil War, will hold a regular meeting Thursday even ing at 8 o clock in Room 525, Court House. A full attendance is requested as delegates will be elected to the na tional convention. .There is a possibil ity of a state department being, formed very soon as Tents have been instituted in Salem and Marshfield. ; N : "Japanese have developed a procjess whereby silk worms can be cultured! 10 times a year instead of twice, as nor mally, and better silk produced. THERE'S OKTXT OWE WAT to secure a satin skin. Apply Satin Skin Cream, then Satin Skin Powder. Adv. 1 T JLf& Know what you give jriuiiici o your children. The open published formula appears onfererr bottle of m m.xn Csi s low CLUB NOTES 1 The Women's Advertising club of Portland met - in the Benson hotel at its weekly luncheon on Tuesday. A spe cial feature of the program was the talk given "by William P. Green, secretary of the national vigilance committee of the Associated Ad Clubs of the World. A number of the women of the club were delegated to attend the men's Ad club meeting today as special guests to hear further suggestions in the matter of advertising. Mrs. William P. Strand borg was also a speaker at the Tuesday luncheon, choosing as her subject the resolution presented by the club to ask Governor Olcott to call a special meet ing of the legislature to ratify the na tional amendment to the federal con- The Infants' and Children's Refttlator 1 QF. knowing how to put on and how to assemble an outdoor daytime cos tume better than any other women in the world is a distinction that Ameri can women have won in Europe. And probably they deserve it. There is a fine attention to detail in the wearing of what we call street costume that is sometimes overlooked by French women, even those who hold the dis tinction of being best dressed. More than that, the American woman has a close regard for the ensemble. She realizes that to be well dressed outdoors she must know that there is an unbroken chain of careful adjustment from the tips of her shoes to the topmost feather on her hat, and she knows that She can not hope to depend on the softening or enhancing effect of a background as she can in her own home This knowledge of dressing for out doors is a fairly recent acquisition, for not many decades ago the outdoors was, so far as American women and their clothes were concerned, simply a place that had to be passed through in order to get from one house to another.: Shawls and mantles and wraps and cloaks were put on after one made one's toilet. Now it is the arrangement of these outside things that is half the bat tle when one is dressing to go outdoors. Keeps Her Jacket On. It has long been the feeling of well dressed . American . women that even in warm -weather ,they ' should not go out without some sort OH jacket or wrap unless their frock was of the sort that was distinctly built not to be worn with a wrap." Wearing a shirtwaist and suit skirt, sans suit jacket, was something that the discriminating woman didn't do. And another thing that she didn't do was to remove her suit jacket. To be sure you did see women at lunch in restaurants or their devotions in church slip off the jacket, but it looked much as it would to see a man remove his suit coat under similar conditions. And as the well-dressed woman never wore a suit in her own home,, then it simply meant that a suit skirt was never worn without a suit jacket, and the shirtwaist beneath was simply something that you knew was there but never saw. save perhaps for a little glimpse. in front that might just as well be a substitute in the form of a littje guimpe or waistcoat Why wear a Jacket at all? Or why wear a shirt waist? Men in their clothes may long cling to absurd devices in their dress. All the king's horses and all the king's men could not persuade a man's tailor to make up his next coat without all of those pockets that they never think of using. But women have no such re spect for the traditional. And so it came about that a new sort of costume was evolved one that looked like a coat costume but wasn't, or at least one that gave the , impression of being perfectly appropriate for the street without an additional wrap, but that really was all In one piece, and The navy blue of this duvetyn suit is relieved by the .burnt orange silk binding and the burnt orange and blue that show themselves in the lining of the detachable cape. - ' consequently cooler and much easier to wear. It Is Qslte Geaalae. There was nothing fakey about that type of costume. It was not on a par with the "false blinds on old-fashioned houses or made ties or gas logs. For there was no effort to give the impres sion of wearing a Jacket or coat, for Popular Albany Girl to Wed Veteran Engagement of Miss Beatrice Maurice Sanders to 0 A. , Jenkins Announced. . Albany, Aug. . J3.-The engagement was announced of Miss Beatrice Maurice Sanders, , who, is to be married in Sep tember to Oren A ult Jenkins. Both Miss Sanders. and Mr. Jenkins are gradaates of - Albany high school. Mr. Jenkins, a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity, was Jh his "junior, year, at ''the University of Oregon when he enlisted in the army, being later detailed "for Instruction in an officers' training camp from which he was commissioned a. second lieuten ant. ' . . Miss Dora J. Dixon and Harry Mac Hugh.' accompanied only by- a sister of Mias Dixon and one of her frienas,: wen married Tuesday by Rev. A, M. Wil liams. The parents of. botfh live near Albany: ;-. . '. ' ; John Haberly and Mies Bernice Hail were the principals ? in a quiet home wedding Monday evening, the ceremony being performed by the father of the groom.. ;-. -j t ';t' 'V'." '"'- J ames ; Christ, voneT f the proprietors of the Imperial cafe, and Ml Lillian M. Rebltske were married. In, Eugene. Assault Charge ' Denied Oregon City Aug '.13. Luther Brack ets George Berry and William Berry, arrested by Constable Ed Fortune Mon day at Jennings Lodge on the charge of assault and battery, brought by - C. U. Bridenback. pleaded not guilty. the-very cut and mode of. the costume proclaimed it for Just what It was -a one-piece street frock. , . Of course, some women never took to these . one-piece costumes. They preferred the separate wrap and . many of them, eagerly went In for capes and were them for every outdoor occasion. In fact, they became so accustomed to capes that they hardly felt "dressed" without one. . It is then for the woman who likes the mode of capes and the woman who wants a compact - little one-piece-street frock that the tailor made shown in the sketch was devised. The material is duvetyni which, by the way.. Is the fabric without a rival for early autumn suits- and frocks and would be very generally worn were the price not enough to make it beyond the reach of the many. The color is. as one might guess, navy blue, but this 1 made vivid by binding of ' burnt orange silk. The lining of the cape fs burnt orange and blue In an inter esting design. - By some very easily managed fasteners in the . back the cape can be removed - or added as you wish. , id artier" BY SHE OA CHILDS rlARO&CAVE3 f Of POWTCANO ) - Water in which cut flowera are kept should be changed every day, and If a little of the stem Is cut off each time the change is made the blooms will lust longer... - Chrysanthemums will need liquid ma nors if they are backward. The growth must be hasteneed in every way possible from this time on In order that the plants can do their utmost to produce fine blooms later in the fall. . ,-'. Dis-budding dahlias should be thor oughly done now, so that the fall blooins will be large and fine. The sooner tills work is done the larger blooms for th strength of the plant is sent into the one large flower on eavh stem, instead of being diffused over buds that have no chance to mature. . - aad "ho iaai , M v riKLY Vwth XrW-Ue- Wl 1 , When the tea-leaves arc young and full of sap, they have more flavor and" less tannin than at any other time in their growth. That is 1 why Schilling Tea has more cups per pound of real tea -flavor than common tea. J There are four flavors of Schilling Tea Japan.. Ceylon India, Oolong, English Breakfast. All one quality. In parchmyn-lined moisture-proof packages. At grocers everywhere. - A' Schilling r Co San Francisco IN Mi Ssssm a prompt efficient vege table cathartic KlwUrti a rejuveuator of dig-as-tire action. iKnth Sedhna Citrate an effective i Mtta severe im lator of the bowels used fre quently with other ingredients by learned doctors in treating colic and diarrhoea. highly valuable in treating indigestioQ in children. Ofl of Anise. Fennel, Caraway Coriander, -Glycerine, Sugar Syrup, all of which help to make this formula the very best that medical skill can devise. If it were possible to improve this for mula it would be done regardless of the fact that a bottle of Mrs, Winslows Syrup now costs twice as much to make as any ether similar preparation. Yet it costs you no more than ordi nary baby laxatives. ' At mil Druggists 1 ANGLO-AMERICAN DRUG CO, 215-217 Pulton Street, N.Y. Gtf9l SlUnfi Afivttr. HanUF.Kk's. Celiac. KnrTark T J" 1 ill coy, Tbc Famous Beantifler Have you tried i It yet? Thousands ,Tier.ihe5 U8.,nK ' u 18 wonder ful tonic for the skin, defies hot summer nd pauses wrinkles, tan. freckles, sallow Bkin. blackheads, eun spots, roughness, ruddiness to quickly disap pear. It brings, roses to the cheeks and makes anyone look 1ft years younger, (.rives a youthful complexion and "A skirt you love to touch." A single appli cation proves it. See large announce ment soon to appear in this paper. Ask your druggist, about It. Ad v. I I M 1 1 U I I COPYRIGHT 1919 BY MILL BROS The results of three Winters of careful study of the Northwest s climatic conditions, and the consequent r needs of babies, arriving .during the Fall and Winter ' months has been the planning of a special (pogggr 78-PTece Complete Layette For the Fall and Winter Baby W're proud of this layette, even as we were of our. Summer Outfit for Baby, for we know it. to be as complete and perfect in every detail as loving hands can make it. $33-45 books aaoirr BAsica Krery mother, darins th period before bftby' mrriral, wmnta to ob tain all information soaaible about babies, their care, etc I. EMMtTT HOLT, M. D. who in recognized as America's fore most baby authority is "The Baby Boudoir's Authority." FREE TO, YOU We hare secured seTeral dozen copies of hw "The Care and Feed ing of Children." Ton may take a copy, Klean from it what yoa will and return it to us, or, if you find yoa wast to keep it, send us its price. Orizinal. distinctive features or ill Baby's Boudoir garments are: Their uniform 22-fnch lengths -their fullness the su periority of their fabrics arid the exquisite, simplicity of their styles and designs. . IS of the little wearables are designed and stamped or cut all ready for lovin it hands to finish. Just enough hand-work to give them the mother touch, .and", think of the Joy of finishing them all with v your own hands.- Every garment .complete with all the tittle rib bons, buttons and crochet-threads. for finishing. Included are: 2 fine nainsook slips Tf fine checked dimity slips to be imply featherstitched or French knotted as you like best. , 1 fine nainsook dress 2 flannel gertrudes 2 flannelette wrappers 3 flannelette nighties . Special! Carriage Straps Dainty ribbon covered elas tic straps in litrht blue and pinks with two snap 7Cp clasps to fasten, FOR Special Down Pillows Pure down sizes 12x18 and tOxH-inch - sizes are CCp to sell now TOB1...J.. Baby's Pillow must be as soft and downy as can. pos sibly be. Real down pillows are 'way out of the ordinary at this low price. and much of importance to the Fail and Winter Baby, is the BaSy's Boudoir Sleeping Bag of Fine Eiderdown "Every mother realizes the importance of keeping- baby i snug- as a buaj-in a rug- always. He'll keep warm as toast in this little bag:-. Note the illustration. . (Inished. : as you can easily finish It,- tt would, cost between 15 and $7. i .' ' Tou may finish tt with ties, buttons or many : mothers prefer to adjust It with safety pins. 1 THE VERY NAME BABY'S BOUDOIR ,ON YOUR GIFTS to the new baby says ever so plainly: "1 am a different 1 kind of a gift. and the pret tiest thing of , my .kind that my donor could find anywhere," Our baby gift displays are a delight and joy to the aunt, uncle. . grandmother, all the relatives and friends who want "something that is distinctive and different" for the new baby.. - (S Fieeet Are All Ready to Wear er "Ose Diapers. , binders, shirts, stockings, .blankets, the Baby's Boudoir Bath Mat and all the other little accessories necessary " are Included. " ' - 1 Remember, this layette Is the resslt ef moatks aad in oaths ef rare fail stedy end plaaalag that It nay he perfect la every detail. At 1ti.4i' it Is priced a aood bit less than evea erdlaary eatflts made la the j ordinary factory way. s . ' "We laTlte yes happily to eenpara It la aay way with aay, ether eatflt la all the eoaatry. . We Offer an Ex pert Maternity Corset Service Make TTse of Osr Phone and Mall Order Departmeat. ,Toir order will be gives the tarns rarefal attention as though yoa were shopping la persoa. To the many who have inquired for our nurse "and to every . mother planning for the new baby or who desires information or help in caring for the wee one, u)e are very glad to announce that- Our Registered Nurse Has Completed the Post Graduate Course in 'Public Health Nursing" and is fitted in the finest possible way for advising mothers as to the plafining and fare of the Fall aad Winter baby. She is here to help Vou at any and all times. You may SEE her here at the Baby's Boudoir phone her at Marshall 678 where .she has a private ' line- write her at our address or. if yoa like, she will call personally at your own home. You will like our Shop It is Port land's only exclusive Baby Shop and the only one of its kind in all the country.' .; 388 Morrison St., Below 1 0 th