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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 21, 1926)
Saturday, August 21, 192fi. EX GRANDE EVENING OBSERVER ' Page Three 1 " . 1 J r, ana jnrs. iteynoias htertain at Dinner Mr. and Mrs. Lee Kcynolds cn- talncd a few friends ut dinner uraday evening at their farm lino near hnru. A lovely pink Id whltu color scheme was used decorate the dinner table whero guests were seated shortly af ti o'clock. Tho centerpiece was bouquet of pink uweetpeas. IMnk idles were also a part of tho oration. L'o v e ra we re laid f o r Mr. an d a. 12. 1. Mossnian, Mr., and Mrs. A. Ted ford, Mr. and Mrs. Lynu right and the host and hostess. ! ''omen's Society ects at Fox Home With members of tho World . hie G-uild us their guests niem- s of the Women s society or tho at Baptist churcli met yesterday lernoon at the home of Mrs. If. ox. Twenty-five women of b society and five- guild girls o present. After the bnwiiu'SH meeting, pre- led over by Mrs. William Shade, ;sidcnt, during which time spe I plans for the annual bazaar be held In November were dls- jmed, an Interesting program is given. . t : Mrs. It. It. Green had charge of mission study. ."Our Templed 11" was the subject. Three of World Wide Guild members. kes Jlonnte Oliver. KXlvi Hrown 1 Hazel Hector, told of the liouw ily held at McMlnnvlllc last Hilli. . The hostesses served . delicious 'rcshments before udjournment. aughters of Utah oncers Meet wo pioneers, Mr:. Jerusha C. Lnchard and Mrs. Mary K, Met- T, were present Thursday after- bn wtien Ihe 'IMughtera of I'tati neers met at the home of Mrs. lyn It. Uosenbaum. with Mrs. tsr M. Ijiihoii and Mrs. Lester ddiird as assistant hostesses. U II neat descendants of Utah neers were In attendance. l u Interesting program vruH n as follows: "History of He- ous Music Mrs. Q. A. Ilean; oncer Hymns. M i-s. V. V. .': II Mi merva Bays t $195 This will buy a pnlr of slippers of a lot displayed in our wlndov - All. of. this lot wuh received of tdr J ftly 1st. and are our newest patterns in Hloi.de, Woods Hose, llelge with alligator trim; mostly Cubun heels, and a few with spike heel. These sold from $U.fiO to $7.50. IboUeii sizes In each lot. Hut now $1.95. More styles at different prices. THE BOOTERY Chiffon Hose at 75 (Spuntex make) When Uoolldge. .cuts the Igovernment expenses, wu cut the price on shoes. Hotpoint Iron The roi.vr nr it. Is Hint .vitn nrril nil fhytrh' iron. The HOT of II. is II I" Iml ns souii as vim turn il mi. ;i-rr Tin-: roi.vr nml t.irr a iiorroivr I In' fiiMiv-t-licMlns. Iinii.-- l-lnsiliiK Mai iivit mi I lie biimkt-t. linn I ho iifw liu- lllll I'JcilH'llt. La Grande Electric Co. ull cr.vt lilng 1 :lcil rlcnl' 1412 Adams Avs. r f Hunting Season ) Opens Sept. 10 i I Iiiim- all khiiN of Am ) . llllinitloii. llirlr t'iirtl'lil'K. ( - Mmt f.liil Mi. ll-. lilflr nml j x Slml (.mis. (iflllili ItiMli - nml (.1111 oil. :F. L. LILLY Hardware Mali 85 Green Beret The fold of thin two-tone green vel vet beret Is held In place by a band of crushed velvet nnd an arrow of rhlnestones and emerald. iteun; biography of Georgts Stod dard os written by his son, How ard, read by Mrs. Helen M. Gli des; vocal solo. Mrs. Maude Kich ens: reading, Mrs. Kato Metcalf; and piano solo. Miss Bessie An drews, A social hour followed the tdioit biislncsM session presided over by Mrs. Holger M. 1 Jirseii. president. The host esses served dainty re freshments. . Union (Speclai) On Wednesday afternoon Mrs. T. M. Kerr, of Un ion, and Mrs. John Dean, of Cove, charmingly entertained a. number of friends at a 1 o'clock bridge luncheon at the Union hotel. The guests, 22 In number, were seated at ond long table, decorated with bouquets of (lie season's flow ers. After luncheon the remainder of t lie a ftornoon was spent at bridge. Mrs. Margaret Smith won i high score and the consolation prize went to M rs. Kdfth Dobbin. i Sister Mary Says: ! (Ily Sister Mary) llreakfasl. Hlackberrlos with thin cream, potato omeht, bran muffins, milk, tea. Dinner Baked cottage ham, po tat oes a u gra tin, m olded swiss chard, tomnlo unlet d, inoiingues filled with pencil c renin, whole wheat rolls, milk, coffee. Dutch apple cake Is n delicious old - fashioned d esse rt I ha t Is su re lo appeal to every bod y--big, little, or medium. Served with sugar and cream it makes a- hourly dessert most desirable Tor luncheon. Dutch Apple Cake One cup flour, teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon bulling powder, I table spoon butter, I egg, milk, apples, 2' tablespoons sugar, teaspoon cin namoon. Mix and sift flour, nnd baking powder. Hub In butter with a fork or lips of fingers. Itreak egg into a cup and add milk to half fill cup- Deal mixture , well and cut inlu dry Ingredients. Add enough more milk to make a soft dough. Spread in a shallow pan and cover j wll h apples pared, cored and cut Jin eighth.. Arrange the slices in . parallel rows wiih the "sharp" 'edge down. Sprinkle with sugar !iind cinnamon and bake 30 minu tes In a moderate oven. Serve warm wiih sugar and cream. nnvs i.n(;(;k iuati: i NKW YOlUv "VKly una IhsW iloiiM," says CK'unio I'lhiuiii. liudy'a tnnimj;4-r. anrnt riurlu that Ihf 'hh'k'a lltui's lias lircn luacnirti'i rrom hi(Jli;t:.s(iuii for puWIIt-lly tr- iu.sih. AImu ft ts tlirurri't't Dial ' J I H4 ly Ih payiiit; ?:t'Mt a wt'i.'k for Iir(.-n ruom at tin: huHpltal. It Is . pruvUlvd ly tlx' hosittal. nr of our ciflomers hn n dandy IV.nl timpc. IH2:t. nil In UinmI Minpx'. IBK.rK. A rarlond of No. 2 shingle nil! probably m'rluf mtMitly. .No. '2 ifditr shin gh' at S I .HA iter gnllon. boH"i Milnt Hi II I .OA per M. Soiih' i:i gin men came hi InIii- nnd tut loaded quite a ttiiiM-h of mtmvf.l iirt your ttwil brfotv the prh-r ml M-s. ' ; I'. S. Tln mi-load of No, -Cedar slilnitlc hmi airivid to day, at HI. ft 5 M'r l. tf yon can grab wbal yon nml .Monday out ihT lite car nml Imnl them your clf, that will Ik XI.H5. ! Claude C. Pratt Lumber Co. "TIio Toot Man's Friend" Mew I'jundry. l'ltonc Mala 218 Mo tiuuda Uiuluuu. ii Artists" Of 'J East Join ; In Miverick Woodstock; n. y. Aug. ai. (AP) The artists of the oast held carnival today. This was tho day of the maverick, the annual cos tume festival of tho Woodstock ar tists know to painters, musicians, writers, actors and other scrvunts of all the seven arts throughout the country. The carnival began yesterday but by midnight, 'with several thousand gathered in this valley In the Catskllls, It was but well under way, and at dawn the end was not lu sight. Brands" Taboo . The festival m called the niuver Ick und In fact all "brands' were taboo. Academicians whoso paint ings hnng In the great galicr.es of the world mingled and danced with painters whoso futurestlc offerings liavw been seen outside their stu dios. Members of famous sym phony orchestras argued fiercely about counter-point and other mysteries of their art with ' Juzz addicts who only knew music as something that comes out of a saxophone with a deby stuck over its mouth. And mingling In the Lhrong, ail costumed In colors the rainbow never knew, were dozens of real artists' models. The villagers gathered from miles around; looked on and gu ap ed. As the night - deepened, tho galely grew. The parly reached fever heat and the quiet hulls where Kip Van Winkle slept wit nessed a wild whirl of color and sound. CuiiipNivs t lenni In a glen a hundred campflrcs gleamed on brightly colored fig ures dancing on the grass. In a great hall tightly puclte.d scon;R danced and shouted and, the un known trod on the toes of the fa mous wllh great abandon. ' In the crowd were, such persons as Clemencc Kamlolph, co-author, of "lialn"; Itobert Chandler, pain ter and former husband of l.lna Cavaltcrl; Hen Hccht, . Chicago novelist; Allen' Dean ' Cochran, landscape painter, of Cincinnati; Professor J. K. Shotwell, of Col umbia university and I'amela Wln-ton-Hrown .widely known painter of miniatures. .'. The New Portable VICTROLA Price " $25.00 and $35.00 CarrV Fall Term Begins Sepl. 7th. You Want a Good Position Very Well- Com pi do one of Dm follmvlug Courses: Accountancy ond HuMucvs Mitnugemenf. J'rlvutc Ser jIhiIhI, Htenogniphlc, Tuc;i'-rK ('ommi'rjlal, l.iyll Service- at Tlih M in lorn Sri km d of IIh-Iiios Write for rartieulurs Baker Business College UAKKK. (JII1;GU.N ' W. 1'. KINION. l'ria. I'HONIj 131 WE DO ALL KINDS OF HAULING ' Any Time - Anywhere Any Place Just leave your moving problems to us. A phone call is sufficient. Office Phone Main S3 Library Ghats New books to bo added to the public library Saturday evening. August 21: Harrington "'Tho Kxiuislto Per dlta." Beach "Padlocked." Bowers "Jefferson and Hamil ton.' Crumley "Constructive Forestry for the private Owner.' Curwood "Tho Black Hunter." Davis "Belshuzxar." Dougal "Tho Burns Country." Foulkc "A Random ltecord of Travel." Galsworthy "The Silver Spoon." Hull "Tin Surry KuniMy. Johnson "The Ioiud of Heath er." Kitton-"Tho Dickens Coun try." Kynn "The Understanding Heart." C8ter "H.lsrtorln Costume." Lockhart "Mysteries of the Sea." . Lockhart "Peril of the Sea." Miller "Joaquin Miller's Poems."- Pedlcr "Tomorrow's Tangle," Meeker "Km to Mulhull." Itlegel "Story of tho Western ltallroads." Hobson "A Wayfarer hi Czecho slovakia," St Hiding "Teeftallow." Terma.ii "Children Heading." . Wren "Beau Sabreur." The New York Tribune says of, Bowers "Jefferson nnd llamillou": "The most Interesting hook Hint has ever been written about tho two greatest antagonists (tils coun try has produced; and the truest story of. Jefferson and the truest "Why don't you blow your horn!" "Who do you think 1 am, Little Boy Blue?" You can't always avoid accidents by blowing your horn ... nor by exercis ing care in driving your car . . . you have always to reckon with the care lessness of others. That's why you need f dot.'-. plele automobile insurance written by this agency of the Hartford Fire Insur . ance Company. "We Wrlto Policies Right." CHAS. H. REYNOLDS 'The Insurance Man Worth Knowing" Hon inter Hotel Btilg, La (iranilu, Ore. Kes. Phone 300-W OFFICE CAT TMAOB MAMK MIO. By Junius A young man gases up at the moon because he la In love, nil old man looks up because ho is In a wing collur. Peggy had been to tho circus, and mother thought to impress u l..uu..t. V(.Mi..n .lni nil inI..B and Hons obey so well, don't you think a utile gtrl ought to . ooey story of Jefferson and Hamilton." One critic writes In the New York World of Hlribllng's "TeefUiUow": "Teeftallow" Is as important a novel as '.Main Street.' We ven ture the belief that It is better. This picture of the last American theocracy Is steeped in reality, Ab ner Tctfnllov is an embodiment of tho Tenneseo .hills. It Is either your plcasuro or your duty to roml 'Teeftallow: your pleasure if you wish to reail a novel of high mer it; your duly if. you wish to dis cover tho America of the hinterland." J.W. Bush Ice Co. You can have Ice Books or Cards or pay cash, as you please. Ice Cheaper at the Plant I I II Phone Main 56 I , m M. II VI IV UU 1 IT V III JU Uklly M. M. V ll I I , ' ' ' "" ' ' 'y IlECIiAlUTlON J1 jfiJI "if" ' SM -- ami eourtcou O' ftrtT.s. ' ! "rv,ce - tl ' sliwMM- ! To the great m labor and capital w -r- i J vVXV employed I Xv ' s; Power mm h olJwtl ' ' .. ' aB&wsKSRsnr t is&m'm:. ' Eastern Oregon Light & moro'iiilekly ?"! sho said . "". . "So I should, mummy." was the Instant reply. "If I had boon us well trained as they have." YoungMcr why dn Ihey ltwi dclegnuw hK-liCtt up, inipa?" ' 1'ntlKnwiiHTr kni't, mjt wn, "Why. I just mnrtl man Miy ho a dclegnlc m li gM v i 1 JtST A Kim "A klHs." said he, "la a common . ' 'houu.' : i "Very common," wild she, with eyes cast down; ' "And yet from u uortuln point of view, A kiss may be common and proper too.' And so the discussion went gully on, . With divers urguments ' pro and con; And each supported . the state ments made. With practice culled lo theory's aid. Till they forgot In a dreum of bliss. What part of speech was a simple kiss, But on one point they hud a single mind It was awfully hard to be declined. A woman Is never too good mi- NEWEST BROADCLOTH BLOUSES To wear with Tom-Boy Skirts .':-V: ::".;' '3-75 Ladies' Ready-To-Wear and Millinery less she's too good to bo truo. itAiHo riuxiit.iM ' Stand By; Hollywood broadcast inc: necllutlou, "LfOoUIng . l-'orward," i by Ben.Turptn, ;- "Old Bill always . respvcU gray hairs." "How coino he's so mean to his aged uncloK" ' ' "Oh, Unci f Jim Is bald." Tlio town nisn Iooki forward tn tho tliiM when lie ran retire to a farm and the farmer look.- forwartl to the 1 1 mo when ho can retire lo town.. , . ' , THE In Standard Power Co. .Dry III OITAl'lTY ri.EANTCRS I KWIM IS IIACKWAltD? ASBUItV PAUK. N, J. Tho next channel feat will be lo swim ' it backwards, perhaps. Miss An gela Kelmmer. of Panama, who ts training hero, plans to go Trudle one better, not only by crawling, but using her nifty back stroke considerable of tho day. ; Kurt her evidence that tho Maoris of New Zealand and tho Indians of Alaska were connected is found in the almost exact duplication of the totem poles used by both rucca Tho raven, which figures as tho creator of mankind on tho Maoris pole, bears the same namo In In dian legend. . BEST Town Laundry i