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About The Sunday Oregonian. (Portland, Ore.) 1881-current | View Entire Issue (June 15, 1919)
THE SUNT) AY OltEGOXIAN. PORTLAND. JUNE 15, 1919. Ing. . The -wedding' will be one of the most notable events In San Francisco society, as the Miller family are very prominent In the southland. Miss Mil ler recently visited at the Ralph Hoyt residence here as the guest of Miss Kathryn. and following the wedding trip. Mr. Langton and his bride will come to Portland to make their home. a Miss Isabel Clark has as her house quests during the Rose Festival gai eties, Mies Mary Louise "Wakefield, of Spokane, and Miss Mary White of Wallace, Idaho. Miss Clark will ac company Miss Wakefield to Spokane for a. brief visit. a Opening a week tnat was brimful of gaieties, Monday evening. Miss Al berta Bair was a dinner hostess in honor of Miss Ruth Shull and William Norman Burgard, w-hose wedding will he an event of tomorrow evening at Trinity church. It was a charming affair, although small and most In formal, and served as a prelude to the dance given later in the evening at the Waverley Country club by Mr. and Mrs. Guy Robert Porter in honor of Mrs. Porter's sister. Miss Margaret Por ter, and her fiance. Van Rennselaer Sternbergh, who will wed Wedneseday at Westminster church. The guests at the dance numbered about 125 of the younger set, and it was a delightful event in every particular. Monday afternoon Miss Shull and Miss Porter shared honors with Miss Mary Westaway at the pretty tea given by Miss Sara Patrick, when the en gagement of Miss Westaway was an nounced. Tuesday Miss Isabel Clark entertained a dozen of the closest friends of the two brides at an at tractive luncheon, and Wednesday evening Mrs. Granville Vernon presided at a merry dinner party of 20 girls, while Mr. Burgard was host for a simi lar affair for a number of his men friends at the University club; Miss Dorothy Strowbridge entertained Thurs day evening with a dinner of 20 covers In honor of Miss Shull and Md. Burgard followed by a dance to which she asked 100 additional guests, both af fairs being given at the Benson hotel. Thursday afternoon Miss Porter and Miss Shull divided honors at the love ly bridge-tea for which Mrs. C. Lewis Mead was hostess at her home in Ir ;rington. Miss Shull was the honor guest for Che luncheon presided over by Mrs. Grenville Vernon, her sister, and ma tron of honor, on Wednesday at her home; Friday evening Mr. and Mrs. Walter Dickey were hosts for a din ner arid a dance complimenting Miss Ehull and Mr. Burgard, and last night James Brady was a dinner host in their honor at the Waverley Country dub. Mrs. William Kaiser was a luncheon liostess yesterday at her home in the Trinity Place apartments in honor of Miss Porter. In the afternoon Miss Margaret Raeder entertained with a charming tea for Miss Porter, and in the 'evening Mr. Sternbergh enter tained a number of the younger set Lt a dinner at the Waverley Country club's dinner-dance. A charming event of mid-week was the dinner party presided over by Mrs. Grenville Vernon in honor of her sis ter. Miss Ruth Shull, Wednesday even ing, which was a "manless" dinner, Mr. Burgard entertaining a group of his friends the eame evening at his bach elor dinner at the University club. The dinner was given at the John Ehull residence, parents of Mrs. Vernon, with whom she is making her home. An artistic array of golden flowers adorned the drawing and dining rooms as well as the dinner table, at which covers were marked for Mrs. Howard Bonsall of Los Angeles, who has come to Portland for the weddine; Mrs. Rob ert Adams of New York, also a house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Shull for the wedding; Misses Shull, Ruth Teal, Alberta Bair, Dorothy Strowbridge, Jean and Helen Porter of Spokane; Rhoda Rumelln, Isabel Clark, Sara Patrick, Louise Poulsen, Mrs. Robert Knos Scott. Mrs. Jack White and the hostess. Mrs. Harrison Corbett has returned from an extended visit with relatives in New Tork and Chicago. She went east to attend the wedding of her sis ter, Mrs. Marjorie Pierson. to Wilson Wing of Providence, R. I. Mrs. Corbett was delightfully entertained by a num ber of old' friends and relatives in New York, Brooklyn, Long Island and Chicago. a Ruth St. Denis, exponent of Interpre tative dancing and known from coast to coast in the theatrical world as a premier danseuse, was the guest of honor for the tea for which Mrs. H. C. Wortman was hostess on Tuesday aft ernoon. Mrs. Wortman had planned an al fresco party, a rose garden tea. the Wortman gardens being especially admired for their beautiful flowering shrubs, roses and riot of fragrant flowers. Owing to the weather the tea was held indoors, the drawing room being converted into a garden with wonder ful flowers. The hostess was assisted by Miss Katharine Laidlaw, who stud ied with Ruth St. Denis at the Deni ehawn school of dancing in Los An geles; Mrs. Jane Burns Albert. Mrs. Lulu Dahl Miller, Miss Louise Caswell, Mrs. Charles Kdwin Sears and Miss Mary Louise Feldenheimer. The artistically appointed tea and punch tables were presided over 1 by Mrs. George Wi!ber Reed. Mrs. Maurice W. Seitz, Mrs. Reginald Mann, of Lon don, England, who Is visiting her mnther, Mrs. Reed, and Mrs. Henry Allan Russell (Helen Wortman.) ... About 100 of Portland's most promi nent younger matrons and maids were asked to share in the gaieties of Miss Sara Patrick's tea Monday afternoon, griven in honor of Miss Margaret Porter nd Miss Ruth Shull. at the Andrew R. Porter residence, and the assemblage was charmingly surprised when the news of the engagement of Miss Mary Catherine Westaway to Dr. Ray W. Shannon, a prominent young physician of Minneapolis, was made known. Cards were presented each guest as she ar rived by little Elizabeth Porter, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy R. Porter. The drawing room of the Porter res idence was aglow with attractively ar ranged baskets and clusters of garden flowers, in the pastel tones, and the tea table, dainty and exquisite in ap pointment and decoration, was presided over by Mrs. Leroy Fields. Mrs. Guy R. Porter, Mrs. James Ambrose, and Miss Harriet Kern. They were assisted in nerving by Mrs. Adolph Neu. Misses Margaret and Albert Bair. Margaret llaeder, and Mrs. W. K. Keir. Miss Westaway is a charming young maid, a daughter of Mrs. Catherine Westaway. and a musician of note. She formerly made her home with her fam ily at Duluth, and she was graduated from the Conservatory of Music at Du luth. While in this city Miss Westaway has been studying with Mrs. Pauline Miller Chapman. She is popular in the youiiKer set. and she will be extensively entertained with pre-nuptial events. Dr. Shannon is a son of Dr. and Mrs. Ray W. Shannon of Minneapolis, and he was graduated from the University Summer Furs Furs for summer days and nights suitable for sea shore or inland, for city or country, for motoring, yachting, for mountain resort or summer home the correct touch of fashion. Chic neck pieces in Fisher, Sable, Mink and Stone Marten of one, two and three skins, or cape, scarf, coatee, or individual design of special appeal. Fur Storage 'Absolute Safety from Fire, Moth and Theft at moderate cost The placing of your furs and fur garments in our refrigerated cold storage vaults will revive and pro long the life of the fur. Temperature of 20 degrees below freezing always maintained. Furs Re-Styled and Renovated at a Most Reasonable Charge tstablishedl864 Trmo Phones: Marshall 785. A 6141 of Minnesota. The family is not only prominent in the city's affairs, but also socially in Minneapolis, where Dr. Shannon -will take his bride to make their future home. The wedding is scheduled for July 9. and it will be solemnized at the home of the bride-elect's sister, in Butte, Mont. Kach day last week was replete with gaieties at the Waverley Country club, the prime reason being the Oregon state championship golf tournament, in which many prominent out-of-town golfers participated. It was a gala event, attracting large numbers of prominent Portlanders and their house guests, who were in the city to attend the Rose Festival. There were lunch eons, teas, dinner and dancing parties almost every; day at the club, one of the most elaborate and largest being the tea Friday afternoon, over which Mrs. Graham Glass, wife of the presi dent of the club, presided. She was as sisted by a number of prominent ma trons and maids during the hours of 4 to 6 o'clock. Presiding at the tables were Mrs. Glass, Mrs. Thomas Kerr, Mrs. "Ralph E. Williams and Mrs, Wil liam "D. Wheelwright. Assisting in the prettily decked drawing room were Mrs. John S. Napier, Mra. Chester Griffin Murphy, Mrs. Joseph E. Wiley, Mrs. Guy Menefee Standifer, Miss Helen Honey man and Miss Elizabeth Huber. Last night closed the brilliant week socially, v.ith a merry dinner and dance. Several of the brides-elect and their fiances were entertained at dinner parties, and the evening was charming and delightful in every particular. Mr. and Mrs. Reade R. Ireland, the former's brother-in-law and Bister, Colonel and Mrs. J. Jungmann of Des Moines, Ia, after which they will visit in other eastern cities. Including De troit, New York and Washington- They will return to Portland about the first of July. Mr. Ireland, who was Captain Ireland, and stationed at the Presidio, recently received his release. Mrs. Ethelwyne C. Lewis and little daughter, who have been guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wrilliam MacMaster for sev eral days, left last week for Victoria, Ft. C, from whence they will sail to China to visit Mrs. Lewis sister, Mrs. Walter Southcott. Mrs. Walter A. Bethel and three chil dren will leave today for the east to join General Bethel, who has been in service overseas. Mrs. Bethel will leave her children at Camp Farwell, Vt., for the balance of the summer, and then she will go to her home in Chevy Chase, Md., to await the return of her husband, who is en route to the United States. Mrs. Bethel is a charming young matron, and has been spending several months in Portland with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Strong, while her husband has been abroad. She has been entertained extensively by her old friends and relatives in Portland dur ing her eojourn here. Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Ruggles Corbett are in the east to visit friends and relatives for several weeks. Mr. Cor bett will attend the reunion and com mencement exercises at Harvard while in the east, an avent that is attracting a great many Portlanders and western men to the metropolis. YaJe, Princeton and Harvard reunions are responsible for the New England state's large number of Portland and other western representatives this summer, the largest assemblage of college men since the beginning of the war. Mrs. John Albert Marshall of Clare mont court, Oakland, CaL, is in Port land with her sister, Mrs. C. D. Brunn. Mrs. Marshall has been ill for some time and was accompanied to this city by a nurse. Mrs. Thomas Martin Fitrpatrlck of Boston, who is visiting here for the aiiutiiiurtiiiiiitiniiiniiiimiimiiiinimiimmniiimmiuiiitiininninnnnHiuii A Woman's Beauty Lies in Her Hair So take care of your hair by using EKDEE HAIR CERATE. It has I proven its worth in baldness, falling hair, dandruff, etc Write or calL I Ekdee Company SO I dIob Arenie Xorth 1 Woodlawi 1365 Engraved Weddings, Announcements, At Home Cards, Calling Cards, Engagements, Invita tions, Steel Die Stamping and Embossing, Monograms and Initials. Gill's The J. K. Gill Company Booksellers, Stationers, Office Outfitters THIRD AND ALDER STS. summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Barron, entertained with an In formal tea in honor of Miss Loretta Hardy Tuesday. Miss Hardy plans to leave for a trip to San Francisco, to visit her eiater. Mrs. Walter Terian was hostess for an Informal tea in honor of Miss Edna Minsinger Thursday, the guests Includ ing a number of prominent matrons and maids, close friends of the bride elect. a a An event In which the sub-debutante set is greatly interested is the dance to be given Wednesday evening at the Portland Heights club house by the Misses Dorothy Webster Corbett, Mary Gill and Catherine Macey. The guest list includes about 60 of the high school Bet. a A little son arrived at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. William Heller Ehrman (Minnie Fleischner) Sunday afternoon. This is their second child, the first baby being a charming little maid. Mrs. Ehrman is a daughter of I. N. Fleischner. and she is one of the most popular matrons in society. Mr. and Mrs. Frederick B. Norman formerly of this city, now of Wilming ton, uel., are house guests of the lat- ter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Browne, 634 East fifty-ninth street Aortn, lor several weeks. Mr and Mrs Norman are charming folk, and their hosts of friends are vieing with each other to entertain them. They removed to the eastern city about two years ago, and are being cordially welcomed by their numerous friends here. ... Mr. and Mrs. Percy Lee Menefee (Ruth Ghirardelli), whose wedding was a notable event in San Francisco on June 4, are expected in Portland today. They returned last week from their wedding- trip and have been registered at the Palace hotel, leaving there Fri day evening for Portland, where they will make their home. . A charming event of the latter cart of the week was the bridge-tea for which Mrs. C. Lewis Mead Was hostess Thursday, complimenting three attrac tive brides-elect Misses Ruth Shull, Mary Westaway and Margaret Porter. The party was given at the handsome residence of the Meads in Irvington, and tables were arranged for 16 young maids for bridge. At tea time, about BO additional guests called. The pretty drawing room was adorned with bas kets of pink peonies and roses, and the tea table was presided over by Mrs. John Shull. Mrs. John H. Burgard and Mrs. Andrew Porter. One of the gayest and most delight ful features of the Rose Festival pro gramme was the Devil Dog club of Ore gon's ball Thursday night at the Mult nomah hotel. Fully 2000 persons at tended, the ballroom, assembly hall, tea gardens and lobby of the hotel being filled with merrymakers. The event was given in honor of the returning service men from overseas, and it proved a fitting tribute in every detail. President of the club Harry Grayson arranged a number of delightful spe cialties, among which was the auction- Here Are Summery Garments at Emporium Attractive Pricings DRESSES Voiles and ginghams, so very airy and pretty. ipii trimmings of embroidery, ruffles or flouncings. There is every summer color you could nish, as rvell as the ever-popular Tehile. One cannot have loo many neat vash dresses for vaca tion lime. These are priced at $650, $8S5, $1050, $1350 WHITE WASH SKIRTS For Sports and Street'Wear There are white wash gabardines, piques, Indianheads. Patch pockets, buttons, tucking and novelty belts add an individual touch to each model. These are remarkably low priced at $2.93, $4.95, $5.95. Ing of dances with the famous Ruth St. Denis, who appeared last week at Pantages theater. About $1200 was realized from this source, the Portland Elks doing the campaigning for the Salvation Army drive. Julius L. Berg was in charge of the Elks at the head of the campaign, and he introduced Judge Arthur Dayton, who was the auctioneer. The ball was attended by a number of notables, among whom Rear-Admiral Fullam of the flagship Minneapolis, and several of his aides. Colonel Creed Hammond, Colonel and Mrs. Collins, Senator Mulkey, Mr. and Mrs. James H. Lynch. Mrs. M. E. Mullen, Lieutenant C. L. Mullen, Captain Irving I. Niles were on the reception com mittee. - a a a Miss Stella Frohman entertained a group of friends at her cottage at Gear- hart last week, the party including Frederick and Lans Hart, the former recently returned from overseas, and a noted composer and musician. Hans Frohman, Marian Howe of Carlton, Katherine Holbrook, Richard Jones of Milwaukee, Wis., formerly of this city, and the chaperons, Mr. and Mrs. Fer dinand C. Smith. They were joined over the week-end by Ernest and Frederick Swigert and Miss Mary Bacon. Miss Geraldine Coursen became the bride of Maurice H. Barnes Wednesday evening at a home wedding. The cere monye was read at 8:30 o'clock at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar E. Coursen. and Rev. Levi Johnson of the First Presbyterian church officiated." The bride was given in marriage by her father. The wedding was attended by about 250 relatives and friends of the couple. Preceding the ceremony Mrs. Rose Coursen Reed, aunt of the bride, sang a bridal hymn. with Mr. Coursen at the piano, and the wedding march was played by Miss Doris Clarke. The entire color scheme of the wed ding was the rainbow tones, the floral decorations and gowns of the attend ants being carried out in the pastel col ors. Mrs. Harold Reed of Los Angeles was matron of honor, and the sister of the bridegroom. Miss Philomene Barnes, was maid of honor. Ben Lindsley of bpokane was best man. The bride, who Is an attractive young woman, was admired in her shimmering robe ol white satin, draped with elab orately embroidered white Georgette crepe. The bodice of the gown was of silk net over cloth of silver, and tiny wisps of silver net, embroidered with silver and elaborated with pearls, Remarkable Blouse Specials Command Your Attention Pretty Colored Voiles at $1J5 These are new checked and domino ideas worked in cleverly with white. One model is a 6lipover style, with white organdy collar and cuffs, giving a delightful freshness. An other style is lace trimmed, featur ing a new idea so ' popular this season. You will 6urely want at least two of these very serviceable blouses at this exceptional price, $1.75. Stout Women, Attention New Georgette Blouses sizes 45 to 51, $8.95 The Emporium particularly looks to the needs of the larger type of stylish woman. These smart Georg ette blouses come in the new round neck ideas, touched with a little colored embroidery" or with neat square collars and fronts in drawn work effect and embroidery. White, beige, and bisque are the three col ors, and, to our notion, the prettiest for summer wear. lm All of our Dolmans, Capes and Coats now Reduced 33 1-3 Per Cent This includes every handsome wrap we have in stock excepting sum mer garments of silk or plush. ALL SUITS REDUCED You know what a won derfully attractive line of suits the Emporium, has box and vestee styles, belted and plain models. In fact, par ticular styles for your particular taste. Now at reductions you will find well worth while. See them. White Hats to Wear With Dainty Lingerie Frocks A big white hat gives the last touch of distinction to the airy wash dress or light silk frock. You may choose one that will add to the charm of your costume from our large number of fine straw hats Mi lan, lisere and leghorn or Georgette and maline transpar ent effects. Trimmed with flow ers, ostrich and ribbon fancies. -124? 123 SIXTH. ST, JUST OFFJVAShTNGTDN. 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She carried an old-fashioned nosegay ol pastei-ionea flowers, with showers of broad satin ribbon and Cecil Brunner rosebuds. Mrs. Reed's town was of heavily beaded white satin, draped with apple blossom pink Georgette crepe. Miss Barnes wore a lovely grown or pinn taffeta, ruffled, and both attendants carried old-fashioned bouquets. An aisle was formed for the bridal party from the staircase to the lmprovied altar in the drawing- room, and there were held by the Misses Genevieve Butterfield, Mixa Noonan and Dorothy Worcester. Following- the ceremony a reception was held and the parents of the bride, and father of the bridegroom. E. 1. Barnes, received with the bridal party. Mrs. Coursen's gown was a lovely cre ation of crushed strawberry satin, elab- orately crocaded in silver and gold, with silver overdrape. She wore also a corsage of mauve orchids. A buffet supper was served during the reception, the coffee urns being presided over by Mrs. Richard Rae of Prineville. 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It is so necessary that you should buy your diamond at a dependa ble, jeweler's one that you know will treat you in all fair ness and give you the very best for the money you expend. We feature a special line of engagement rings in all the newest mountings at $25, $50 and $100 Don't Forget Jacoby's Lucky Wedding Rings Quick Repair Work We are equipped to,:do your repair work efficiently and in the shortest possible time. Any work brought in in the morning will be ready for you the eame day. Bon Ton Corsets give one the satisfaction of knowing that authentic knowledge has gone into their making, and the assur ance of true grace and perfect fit. We know just the model you need, and our expert corse tieres are here to serve you and help you in the selection of a corset that will particularly suit your type of figure, no matter whether you be the slender, girlish type or the stylish stout Figure. Buy Your Intimate Feminine Things at a Woman's Shop . 1 LIU rV r 1 vxutw J) 374 Morrison I