imimimumninniiuiniiiiiiimiiiniitiiiiiimiininii • I SOCIETY Inii'iuimiiiiiiuniniinnnnmiiininwniniiimiuiiniiiiMinaiiniiiniiniBninniiiiigi (By Esteher Fell) 1 Following the all day session oi i the military review, came the in formal matinee dance given yester day afternoon for the benefit of th< Armenian Relief at the men’s gym This morning was the occasion oi the annual May morning Senioi Breakfast at the home of Mrs. P. L Campbell. True to traditions this affair was one of the most charm ing and enjoyable of its kind. The oommittee In charge consisted oi ' Beatrice Wetherbee, Helen Madden, Margaret Beatie, Genevieve Chase, Blanche Anderson, Helen Gardinler, Margaret Jackson, Gayle Action, Mil. dred Smith, Florence Johnson and Maybelle Millef. A number of oth er dances have been scheduled for the week-end, and picnics claim a goodly share of the time. • v • ' May Day, with masses of flowers and greenery formed the keynote of k the decorations ajt the dance given k by members of Friendly Hall this k evening. , Dean BHzabeth Fox, Mrs. Edna P. Datson, Mrs. Elisabeth Prescott, Miss Gertrude Talbot, Mr. * and Mrs. Peter Grockatt, Mr. and * Mrs. R. W. Prescott, and Mr. and , Mrs. S. B Warner chaperoned the , affair, at which guests were Margar et Scott, Genevieve Matson, Irene Whitfield, June Bergen, Dorothy t Suchman, Mable Southerland, Bea trice Crewdson, Jeanette Kletsing, 1 LOye DeVore, Naome Robbins, Myrtle Joyner, Marjorie Meyers, Marion Bowen, Lola Keizer, Ruth Sussmah, Ruth Tuck, Lotta Hollopeter, Lucile Keyt, Beulah Wright, Norma Dobie. Charlotte Clark, Jeanette Hogan, Helen Reed, Elsie Marsh, Dorothy Miller, Leola Green, Claire Thomp son, Margaret Carter, Inez Lacey, Ariel Dunn, Genevieve Spriggs, Cres * cent Lorenz, Lucile Redmond, Fran cis Moore, Natrude Larson, Doris Stiles, Kathryn Dobie, Meltrude Coe, Florence Jagger, Lucile Branstetter, Marjory Kay, Louise Davis, Wanda Daggett, Doris Parker, Helen Dustin, Jeanette Calkins, Claire Wheelhouse, Dymond Povey, Germany Klemm, Alice Thurston, Beatrice Morrow, Hubert Schnek, Clarence Lombard, Floyd Westerfield, Harry Ellis, and Melvin Solve. * * * Friday evening at the Hotel Os born, members of the Sigma Delta Phi sorority were hostesses to a number of friends at their formal dance. The rooms were made into bowers of springtime by a profusion of piik carnations artistically ar ranged in baskets hanging from the ceiling. The feature was an “April Shower”; little Mildred Sinniger, of Roseburg, danced neath a shower of silver confetti, the lighting ef fect coming from a silver moon. Following this, refreshments were served at daintily decorated tables in the Japanese tea room. The pa trons and patronesses were Dean Fox, Mr. and Mrs. George H. Mc Morran, Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Boynton, Mr. and Mrs. M. H. Douglas, and ; Miss Sue Badolett. The guest list included Wiima Hoagland of Marshfield, Edna Mas ney of Astoria, Hilda Hensley, Edna Pearson, Caroline Starker, Ruth Kennedy, and Roma Jacobson of Corvallis, Nita Hillstrom of Van couver, Wash., and Agnes Hogan and Alise Hall of Oakland, Nl3h Chapman, Ogden Johnson, George “ Hopkins, Frank Miller, Melvin Solve, Louis Dunsmore, Henry Koepke, Kenneth Standifer, Lyle Bartholo mew,* Carlton Savage, Don McDan iels, Dow Wilson. Horace Byler, Wil lis Kays. Dan Woods, Don Davis, Wesley Frater, Warren Kays, Roy Veatch, John Palmer, Peter Crock ett, Harry Powell, Allan Oden, Rob - ert Burns, Charles Crandall, Hunten Mercer, Huber Rambo, Miles Me Key, Howard Kelly, Harry Ellis, John Flynn, Stanley Shell, Glenn Campbell, Arthur Keeney, Virgil Porter, Stanley Evans, Robert Mann, Robert Boetticher, William Cole-1 man, Asa Eggleson, Andeas Bracher, Ralph Couchf Rollin Woodruff, Wal ter Tavlor and Verle Jones. k • • • , Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma were hostesses for a tea this after * noon in honor of Miss Catherine Beekley, a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma at the University of Penn sylvania. The rooms were decorat ed with varicolored spring flowers, and about three hundred guests call ed during the afternoon. In the re ceiving line were Mrs. Ellis, Miss Elizabeth Fox, Miss Catherine Beek ley, Mrs. S. D. Allen, Mrs. F. L. Chambers, and Gene Geisler. Miss Gertrude Talbot, Mrs. P. L. Camp ' bell, Mrs. Dugald Campbell, and Mrs. Edna Prescott Datson poured, assist* ed by the freshman girls. • • • The engagement of two former University students was announced in the Pendleton papers recently, , that of Dorothy Hunziker and Bruce Bailey. Miss Hunziker, a student at Oregon in 1918, was a member ol Alpha Phi. The following year going to the University of Washing ton where she attended until last year. Mr. Bailey, a Sigma Chi on this campus, entered this institution ig 1919, after being released from the service. , As yet no definite date has been announced for the marriage but it is looked for in the early part of] June. The young couple expect to make their home in Pendleton where Mr. Bailey has recently entered the automobile business. • t • Members of Sigma Nu fraternity were hosts for an informal dinner dance preceeding the Glee Club con cert last Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Lynn McCready were chaper* ons. Guests for the evening were Helen Hooper, Eloise White, Frances McGill, Wenona Dyer, Ruth Eng* strom, Dorothy Dixon, Helene Kuy kendall, Barbara Shepherd, Lenore Cramm, and Genevieve Haven. • • • ] .Apple blosoms and spring flowers, suggestive of May Day, decorated Hendricks Hall last night for a for* mal dance given by the girls. A huge green May Basket held corsage bouquets and bontonnierres which were given out by a "flower” as a means of securing partners for the feature dance. Patrons and patronesess for the dance were Captain and Mrs. Ches ter L. Carlisle, Dean Elizabeth Fox. Miss Gertrude Talbot, Mrs. Edna Datson, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas A. Larremore, and Mr. and Mrs. Rosen, burg. The guest list included: Dorothy A. Miller, Donald Huntress, James Baker, Albert Capps, Alex Shipe, Francis Wade, Raymond Powell, Scan Collins, Leland Lapham, Ralph Hoe ber, Marvin Eby, Harold Quayle, George Houck, Edmund Keech, rz Aubrey Furry, Evertt Brandenberg, Rolfe Skulason, Johnnie Houston, James Benedict, Wesley Shattuck, Joe Wilson, Donald Wilkinson, Clyde Mason, Kerby Miller, Cecil Ross, Dix Holaday, J. Butler, Tom Tuve, Jack Young, Roscoe Hemenway, Don Zimmerman, Wilbur Bolton, George Gochnour, Dick Burg, Fred Sher man, Harold Simpson, Ralph Pos ton, Ed Fahnestock, Roscoe Roberts, Karl Yonder Ahe, George Samuels, Richard Nelson, Car! Lie be, Clar ence Walker, Lynn Fuller. • * • About 200 girls, seniors and their underclass escorts, attended the Senior Breakfast given this morning at the home of Mrs. P. L. Campbell. A dainty breakfast was served by the freshman girls, and the seniors were presented with souvenir menu cards as mementois of the occasion. The breakfast was in charge of Beatrice Wetherbee and was given’ under the auspices of the Y. W. a A. • • • The Kappa Sigma house is the scene of - a novel informal dance this evening when the members are entertaining in the form of a “futurist danoe.” Disguised walls, doors out of place, and programs of various hues and shades lend their part to the whole effect. Patrons apd patronesses for the evening are Dr. and Mrs. R. H. Wheeler, Mr, and Mra- Alex Bowen, and Dean Fox. Guests include Dorothy Ben nett, Nell Warwick, Gladys Lane, Hjuth Montgomery, Esther Gardner, Hope McKenzie, Geneleve Clancy, Mildred Aumiller, Ruth Austin, Clare Ryan, Mirlan Briggs, Ruth Dorris, Alice Evans, Myler Calkins, Helen Gardlnier, Alice Wherity, Alys Sut ton, Phebe Gage, Gladys Everett, Jen Laughlln, Marvel Skeels, Car oline, McPherson, Mauna Loa Fallis, Merle Hamilton, Zo Allen, Ruth Hopkins, Helen Nelson, Ruth Eng strom, Barbara Shephard, Annamay Bronaugh, Marjorie Kruse, Mildred Weeks, Frances McGill, Bula Smith, Janet West, Martha Westwood, Mil dred Lauderdale, Edith Herron, Marian Linn, and Reba Macklln. * t * Kappa Alpha Theta was sponsor •.. *■<" s° «0,t «« »?*'•• • _ **/ A ‘Rousing Straw ^Hat Sale! $1.65 and $3.95 If* you want to see what the smartest straw hats of the season look like, you’d better look in our windows now. If you want to see how well they look on you, how light in weight they are and how comfortable they feel on the head, you’d better come in and try them on. If you want to own the best style and get the best value you’d better choose one and take it away with you. In any kind of a ‘“straw vote” these styles of ours would win. All weaves, all sorts, all sizes. OPENING SALE OF Hats worth up to $4.00. at.............$1.65 Hats worth up to $10.00 at.$3.35 Included are Panamas, Bancocks, Leghorns, Soft Mil«n, Braid Straws, Sennets and Stiff Milans. F OR STYLf. OUt. I !r Y * r '■ *">*« r REGAL kSHOES the best It’s after you've worn a pair of Regal Shoes for about 6 months that you really begin to appre ciate them. They look as good as new; they are. It pays to buy the best. They’re. t yajo tu $12.58 0 Wade Bros. The Home of Hart Schaffner and Marx Stylish Clothes CLUB CIGAR STORE Favorite Resort of U. of 0. Student! 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