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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1917)
12 THE 3IOT1XIXG OREGOXIAX, FRIDAY, v - NOVEMBER 2, 1917. Baker Commercial Club, is at the Imperial. ;. i' l! il ' a ;. i 1, t ,:( - . h ;., i - i, i ... 4 i- Ik I BY GERTRUDE. F. qORBETT) 1.11 1. .1111111111 lUnmi nil lllimn liiirrrn-iirrTTl lllllllllllllllllll. oooooQoooociaoooooooocoocisoeseoooao0o.ocoooaoaooooooaooi3aaoooi3io life i ANOTHER holiday has come and1 gone, but Halloween lingered long enough to afford fun a plenty for everyone. It was a wel come relief from the serious and ardu ous pursuits of men, women and chil dren In which they have been bo deeply engrossed for months. And they reveled in all the sport of the younger contingent, donning holiday garb and entering into the spirit of gaiety with all the zest of the girls and boys in their teens. Many masquerade parties were given, some of which were sur prises to their "hosts." One of the biggest and gayest events of the week will be the unique harvest festival in honor of Halloween to be given tomorrow night by the Portland Hunt Club members. They have ar ranged a varied and interesting pro gramme that will appeal to every one. Dozens and dozens of out-of-town folk are arriving in this city today to attend the big frolic for which the T. P. A. will be hosts tomorrow night at the Multnomah Hotel. They have secured the assembly hall and tea gar dens for the affair, which will include dancing and numerous games, on the order of an early Western city. The affair is for the benefit iof their liberty bond fund, and the games are expected to bring in a large sum of money. A Jitney jazz orchestra, also will be a source of revenue. Governor Withyeombe will lead the grand march at 9 o'clock, after which the frolic will wax fast and merry. Members of the association, with their wives and other members of their fam ilies, will come from Seattle, Spokane, San Francisco and other points in the Northwest to attend this function. Paul J. Sullivan, president of the organiza tion, will receive the throng of guests and will be assisted by Clyde Evans, ecretary. Halloween was the occasion of a de lighful party given at the artistically decorated home of Mr. and Mrs. H. Hellis. Music, dancing, games and 500" were the diversions of the even ing. Supper was nerved at which 27 people enjoyed themselves. Prizes for "500" were as follows: first lady's prize. Miss Xavier Rigney; second lady's prize, Mrs. O. Rosewcll; first gentle man's prize, Mr. Nelson: second gen tleman's prize, Mr. H. Bertrand; booby prize was awarded to Miss E. Nelson. Following were those who were present: Mr. and Mrs. Nelson and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Rosewell and children, Mr. and Mrs. Van Rossen and children, Mr. and Mrs. Dahlgren and son, Clement, Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn, Mr. and Mrs. Bertrand and daughter, Virginia, Mrs. Jones and son, Clyde, Mrs. F. P. Rigney and daughter, Xavier, Miss Peterson, Private Williamson and the host and hostess, Mr. and Mrs. H. Hellis and children, Klna, Bobby and Carl. Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will meet Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the residence of Miss Ruth Hardy, SS4 Hawthorne avenue. Misses Emily A. and E. P. Dowell, of Boston, are making a tour of the Northwest and are spending a few days in Portland at the Multnomah Hotel. The MacDowell Club met yesterday in the Multnomah for rehearsal and later devoted a few hours to sewing for the Ked Cross Society. One of' the most interesting and merry events of Wednesday night was the Halloween frolic given to Dr. and Mrs. Millard C. Holbrook at their home on Willamette Heights, when a number of their friends called attired in fancy costumes and masques to celebrate the 11th anniversary of their 'Wedding. The party assembled at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Gaylord, in Irvington, and proceeded to the Hol brook residence en masse. The em bryo hosts delightfully ,were sur prised and entered into the spirit of the occasion, the self-invited guests representing all characters suggestive of the war times, well-known commod ities, children and story-book person ages. Mr. and Mrs. P. L. Campbell, the for mer being president of the University of Oregon, came to town Wednesday night to attend the banquet given by the Japanese Consul and Mrs. Akamatu at the Multnomah Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Campbell remained over for a few days at the Multnomah. Mr. and Mrs. WJ. Kerr, of O. A. C, also came to partici pate in the festivities in honor of the Mikado's birthday, and they, too, stopped over for a brief visit at the Multnomah Hotel. Members of the Portland Heights Club are eagerly awaiting the annual election of officers, which will take place tonight, and the dance which will follow. Dancing will be from 9 to 12, and a gala evening is anticipated. The social committee for this month is: Mrs. H. A. Sargent.. Mrs. H. G. Thomp son. Mrs. Kufus Holman, Mrs. Omar C. Spencer and Mrs. J. A. Givens. The Red Cross committee suggests that the members prepare their pack ages for the Christmas boxes for the soldiers abroad. Packages or money for this purpose may be left at the Red Cross headquarters, second floor Cor bett building, not later than today. The upperclassmen of the University of Oregon medical school will be hosts 0h SlfiM-NAY.' IOOKIT- .TWO pair : I : S'W I COLORADO MAID WHO VISITED HERE AND SHARED IN MANY DELIGHTFUL GAIETIES. BOYS' GOOD SUITS WITH 2 TROUSERS -It's some satisfaction to know that in these times of poor goods and high prices you can still get those high-grade boys' two-pant suits we've always sold. They're here in abundance all sizes, models and colorings at SIO. S12. SO. 815, S16.50 143 Sixth St.. Oip. Meier & Frank. ( : s V I f - - : - f t n t J I - :-' ! lf ;- - fit " ' "t f i i l i i It- m tonight for the freshmen at a Hallow een party at the Harlow-Grady Hall. ' Ben E. Titus, formerly of the Tele gram staff, and Miss Carolyn Lucille Kremlen were married at the Epworth parsonage. Twenty-sixth and Savier streets. Dr. C. O. McCulloch perform ing the ceremony. Irvington Club will be the scene of an informal dancing party this even ing, when the Junior members of the club will entertain their friends. There will be a special feature dance and good music. Mrs. Samuel I. Guiss'left Wednesday evening for San Francisco to visit her son, who is in training at the Mare Island naval station. Mr. Guiss, Jr., will leave shortly for a cruise on the United States cruiser Saratoga. The Rose City Park Club members will be entertained tonight with a merry Halloween frolic Dancing will be the order of the evening, and the decorations will be suggestive of the holiday season. The committee for the event is: Mrs. E. D. Howell, chairman; Mrs. C. L. Wheeler, Mrs. C. A. Caulfleld, Mrs. Russell Stephens, Mrs. L. M. Jef fers. Mrs. W. R. Boyle and Mrs. A. R. Ritter. Miss Mabel Tauhenheimer, who was in California for several months, was delightfully entertained. She will re turn home to Portland in a ew days. . Mr. and Mrs. Albert R. Munger (Bess McCarthy) are receiving congratula tions upon the arrival of a daughter, born Tuesday. One of the jolliest Halloween parties of the week was given Wednesday by the girls who are residents at the Martha Washington. Elaborate deco rations appropriate to the occasion were used to adorn the living-room and halls. Dancing, music, games and a supper were features. The ladies of the Altar Society of St. Laurence parish will entertain at the home of Mrs. P. J. O'Donnell, 304 Grant street, this evening at 8 o'clock. Cards will be the feature of the evening. As sisting the hostess will be Mrs. Edward Barrett, Mrs. W. P. Lillis and Mrs. C. Smith. of Sherwood, is at the is at is at is at F. M. Curtis, of Roseburg, is at the Seward. Roy S. Neal.' of Hood River, is at the Oregon. A. M. Edwards, of Fossil, Is at the Imperial. Charles M. Thall, of New York, Is at the Ritz. Alaya Jones, of Medford. is at the Cornelius. John R. Chegin, of Eugene, is at the Cornelius. F. E. Gaffany, of Butte. Mont., is at the Eaton. C. Lv Chambers, of Eagle Creek, is at the Eaton. - J. Layman, of New Tork, is at the Multnomah. J. M. Hoyt. of San Francisco, is at the Perkins. D. D. Hail, Washington. J. Jackson, of Condon, is at the Washington. Ernest E. Hyland, of Eugene, the Oregon. Frank Hildebrand, of Astoria, the Seward. Virgil Caligan. of The Dalles, the Oregon. H. H. Heidbrink. of Dayton. O., is at the Portland. M. L. Wilcox, -ot Seattle. Wash., Is at the Cornelius. Frank B. Waite, of Sutherlin, Is at the Imperial. S. G. Morin, of Spokane, Wash., is at the Portland. Mrs. H. G. Cooper, of Arlington, is at the Palace. Dr. C. H. Henly, of Leesburg, Va., is at the Perkins. Martin Kennedy, of Knoxville, Tenn, is at the Ritz. J. F. Ewing and Mrs. Ewins are at the Multnomah. A. L. Fleming, of Spokane, Wash., is at the Multnomah. W. G. Weightman, of Spokane, Wash., is at the Seward. II. A. Partridge, of Nampa, Idaho, is at the Portland. Rev. E. Saymore, of Pocatello, is reg istered at the Carlton. E. D. Severance, of Tillamook, is reg istered at the Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Ross, of Sea side, are at the Carlton. J. E. Wilson and Mrs. Wilson, of Eu gene, are at the Portland. E. Johnson and Mrs. Johnson, of Newport, are at the Palace. W. E. Waite and Mrs. Waite. of Cush man, are at the Washington. C. R. Kelly and Mrs. Kelly, of Dah lia, Wash., are at the Palace. J. H. Stewart and family, of Kansas City, are at the Washington. C. Conrad and Mrs. Conrad, of Aber deen, Wash., are at the Cornelius. Joe P. Conway and Mrs. Conway, Los Angeles, are at the Seward. Henry O'Brian and Mrs. O'Brian, Albuquerque, N. M., are at the Ritz. Dr. S. E. Stafrin and Mrs. Stafrin, Kalama, Wash., are at the Nortonia. D. McKillican and Mrs. MrKIlllcan, of Oregon City, are at the Perkins. P. R. Colson and Mrs. Colson, of Sac ramento. Cal., are at the Multnomah. C. J. Forstrom. a merchant of North Powder and former member of the Legislature, is at the Carlton. F. J. Lichtenberg, of the Northwest ern Bank building, was called to Chi cago yesterday by the death of a brother. Joseph Lichtenberg. Mr. Lich tenberg will remain in the East about two weeks. of of of iliMMHBili piliPihiW f "-? 1 CLUBS' CALENDAR FOR TODAY. Art Lecture Professor A. L. Peck, of O. A. C. Library Hall, 3:15 P. M., auspices Woman's Club. Portland Railroad Woman's Club With Mrs. J. Ream, 304 Fargo street. Portland Parent-Teacher Coun cil Librarv, this afternoon. East Side W. C. T. U. With Mrs. C. W. Barzee, 1071 Belmont street. Patriotic Entertain ment Woodiawn School, tonight: Dr. K. A. J. Mackenzie to speak. Red Cross, First Presbyterian Church All-day meeting. Concord Tarent-Teachers School, this afternoon. Lecture by Austin Lewis Lin coln High, tonight. Brooklyn Mothers and Teach ers Entertainment tonight in Ufer's Hall. Portland Research Club With Mrs. H. A. Killam, 1:30 P. M. STAGE FOLK RESPOND "DAD" HUNT ILL, IS W ORD J f-'O IS ACTION. THE Association of Collegiate Alum . nae will meet tomorrow at the University Club. There is a change of time scheduled and a difference is an nounced in the form of luncheons and all members are asked to take notice of these innovations. The hour set is 12:45 o'clock. The service will be a buffet luncheon. Later there will be a play. The Tenor, dramatized by Mrs. C. H. Sherrard and produced un der the auspices of the dramatic de partment. In the cast will be some of the talented members, including Miss Frances Gill, Miss Sally Sabin, Miss Cora Shaver. Miss Alice Wilhelm and Miss Aileen Brong. For reserva tions call Main 695. Another event of Saturday will be a reception at which the State Woman's Press Club will honor Miss Mary Caro lyn Davies. poetess and a member of the club. The reception will be given in the home of Mrs. Thomas Hawkes, 563 Fourth street. The guests will in clude local writers and friends of the talented poetess. , ' , Linnton Parent-Teacher Association will meet tonight ' for a Halloween party in Maccabees Hall. : ' Highland Parent-Teacher Associa tion will hold a neighborhood meeting beginning at 10 o clock today. .......... -- Overlook Woman's Club will meet with Mrs. J. -W. Hakkins, 859 Castle avenue, at 2:3.0 P. .M. "today. - East Side Central- W. C. T. 'IT. will meet today at 2 o'clock P. M. with Mrs. C. W. Barzee,'1071 Belmont street. Take Sunnyside or Blount Tabor car, and. get off at Thirty-fifth street. bers will respond to rollcall bv read ings from the last two Union Signals. Please bring- material for gun wipes and tea towels, as an emergency call has come in for them before Novem ber 15. The Portland Railroad Woman's Club will meet today at 2 P. M, with Mrs. Jessie Ream. 304 Fargo street. Re ports of officers will be read. At the vesper service Sunday at the Y. W. C. A. Mrs. A. A. Morrison will give a talk on the work done in col lection of knitted and crocheted squares for blankets for the Serbians. Concord Parent-Teacher Association will meet today at 2:30 o'clock in thu Concord School. Mrs. C. O. Upton, of Berkeley rivi. League, is a visitor in Portland. She is here to visit several of the clubs and to say gocd-bye to her son whr, i leaving for the front. Mrs. L'nton ex pressed great interest in the conserva tion of foods and other work in which the Civic Welfare Club specializes. Mrs. Upton was prominent in the Catholic Woman's League when she formerly lived in Portland. The Portland 'Research Club will meet today with Mrs. H. A. Killam, 610 Hancock street. (Broadway car.) The Portland Kindergarten Council extends a cordial invitation to all moth ers ana teachers to attend its monthly luncheon tomorrow at the- Hazelwood, 12:30 o'clock. This luncheon is for the purpose of gathering together infor mally those persons who are actively engaged in kindergarten work and all others who are interested in the edu cation of the child of pre-school age Miss Harriett Wood, school librarian, will speak. PERSONALjVIENTION. R. Ragsdale, of Moro, is at the Oregon. George Hill, of Salem, Is at the Per kins. L. A. Stoop, of Elgin, Is at the Im perial. John Vie, of Joplin, Mont., is at the .aton. George H. Minty, of Salem, is at the Palace. W. E. Meaeham. secretary of the Women Are Telling" Each Other about the special sale on Suits at CHERRY'S for 25 which were for merly 130 to 45. 389-91 Washington Ben Dillon and Rosebud Chora "Come Through" Unbenltatlngly at Rehearsal. When Ben T. Dillon and his associ ates at the Lyric xneater get busy on relief work there are no streamers of red tape fluttering in the wind. At yesterday's rehearsal the genial come dian and the Rosebud Chorus furnished anotiier instance of the generous and unhesitating response that people of the stage are wont to make to an ap peal on behalf of those less fortunate than themselves. Castanets were sounding when Larry Keating sent word down to the stage that "Dad" Hunt, veteran showman and for three seasons candy and lanch ven dor to the stage people of Portland's theaters, was seriously ill with pneu monia at his home at 7503 Fifty-ninth avenue Southeast. At the news guilty consciences reminded their owners of certain little unpaid bills. A count was made and the company was found to be in "Dad's" debt to the extent of 14. A big round coin traveled from Ben Dillon's pocket to an envelope, hastily snatched up, and the veteran fun- maker made the rounds. The $20 bulge in the envelope was sent "up front" and after the matinee Messrs. Keating and Dillon drove to Dad's home and presented the contribution. NEW POSITION IS FILLED Great Northern Man Will Handle Export and Import Business. H. A. Jackson, formerly traffic man ager for the Great Northern Pacific Steamship Company, with headquarters at San Francisco, passed through Port land yesterday en route to Seattle, where he takes a position to handle BDonM Cream Cheeso never does disappoint! this treat in cookincr econornv Any good cook can make a first rate cake with butter. But my! how that cake does eat into a pound of expensive butter ! Yet there is a way to make perfectly delicious cake without using a speck of butter. May we whisper the secret ? Use rich, pure Cottolene. l Keep to your recipe. But instead of using butter, use, Cottolene one-third less than you would ordinarily use of butter. Profit by the experience of other housekeepers, who have found that Cottolene because of its greater richness goes farther than other shortenings which they had been using. See if you don't make a cake that you are proud of. If you could taste the delicious cakes, flaky pies and pastries, crisp biscuits, tender muifins and di gestible fried things that rich Cottolene makes, we are quite sure you would use Cottolene in all your frying and in all your baking. . Wholesome Cottolene produces perfectly delici ous results. It combines true economy with better cooking. Try it in any familiar recipe and see. Cottolene is sold by grocers in tins of convenient sizes. Recipe for MARBLE CAKE W cups flour teaspoon cinna mon teaspoon nut meg 1 tablespoon molasses J cup Cottolene 1 cup sugar 2 eggs X cup rnilk , 3 level teaspoons baking powder J teaspoon salt Cream Cottolene, add sugar gradually, yolks of eggs beaten thick and light, flour sifted with baking powder and salt, added alternately with milk. Then whites of eggs beaten stiff. Pour one third batter into bowl and add to it molasses and spices. Pour into well greased pan, alternating light and dark mixtures. Bake 40 to 45 minutes in moderate oven. ITHE N. K. FA1RRANK COMPANY) Makes Good Cooking Better importing and exporting business for the Great Northern Railway. It is understood the post is a new one. just created. The place he for merly held has been abolished, due to the drafting of the two liners. Great Northern and Northern Pacific, by the Government. LESLIE ALT flavors all "ibefood evenly it's a wonderful exid to cooks si Following a' business meeting, mem-Blreet, Portland, Or. Adv. Telephone Strike! Owing to the telephone strike some of our custom ers have been unable to reach us by telephone. A post card through the mail will bring our driver to your door post haste. We do all kinds of French dry cleaning, Dyeing and Press ing. We make new gowns or alter old ones. Out-of-town orders given prompt attention. BROADWAY DYE AND CLEANING WORKS PORTLAND, OREGON A Tooth Cleanser not a Tooth Medicine NO dentifrice can rid your mouth of germs or act as a cure-all for oral ailments. No dentifrice can honestly claim to do moro than cleanse the mouth and teeth of food de posits and so remove the cause of decay. Ask jour dentist if this isn't so. Ask him also about S. S. White Tooth Paste a pure, wholesome, non-medicated cleanser made according to a non-secret formula approved by the highest authorities in mouth hygiene. Use S. S. White Tooth Paste for a week the appearance of your teeth at the end of that time will testify eloquently enough to its efficiency as a cleanser. Your druggist has it. Sign and mail the coupon below for a copy of our booklet, "Good Teeth; Uow They Grow and How To Keep Them." THE S. S. WHITE DENTAL MFG. CO. MOUTH AND TOILET PREPARATIONS 211 SOUTH 12th ST. PHILADELPHIA. 111111 ' - 'iiiuwuniii in iin.m , - . , 1 111 " - - - I "WT TTDifWT sendrne a ccpy of Good Teeth: HawThey Grow and JJlUVKjri Wow to Keep Them? olsS a tamplt tube of SS-MTtiUTcxxthPait, VTwr" AI-irtPT-qg 1 i w ii m ii il 1 1 1 i n 1 m m i-i Mi.n.iMiiiiiiiwi T i , inn , n. ,. 71