TITE 3IOEXIXG OREG OXTAK", FRIDAY, FEBRUARY MO, 1922 1Z f '"' ' i " ' i' urn i , i : , '! ' "mi i 'inn mi i'ii M ii .ji,., :' i! !'! 1 i, ; H THE Cc HE tea at the borne of Mrs. F. J. Cobbs on Montgomery drive is important event on today social calendar, given for members of and all persona interested in the Arts and Crafts society. There wl!I be on I dismay a large amount of the work f li.s Fhylli- Muirdon. an accom plished artist who has studied in the schuol of arts, Scotland, Paria and other European cities and under such jrt.t as Sargent. In America she has directed her work along special I.nes and has taken summer courses under weil known instructors. Stage decoration designs to be used in a play by Maurice Brown of New Tork and batik scarfs which w:ll find their way- to London by special order will be on display. Miss Bertha Stewart and iliss Florence Knowlton will pour he first hour and Mrs. I B. Linthi cum snd Mrs. Julia Marquam will pour the second hour. They will be .-si:ed by Mis Helen Harmon. Mrs. Ferdinand Smith. Mrs. Oliver walker. Mi-s Alice Wilhelm. Mrs. Frank Werr. and Mrs. Ionaid fcpencer. The hours are from 4 till . The Portland Alumnae chapter of ".a:nma Phi Beta will meet this after noon at the home of Mrs. L. C Keich inll. eJ Kat Fiftieth street North. All Gamma Phi Betas in the city are invited to attend. A musical programme with addi tional feature dancing will be given under the au.pices or the Realization R-8ue at MS Thirteenth btreet at 8:15 ton.,-ht. The affair is being given in benefit of the community chest and the following programme has been arranged by the league: Mr.. Vary lrtin Korte. oprftno: Vr. r'rjt ak llwkin. mn voprano: Mr Jean Atikin.. r-dT . Miw Marlon lvoff. fancy .Inn.'-r; ;orjt NalunwR. baritone; Reed ttltK ml- turt-t: Clifford injtra- meniiil ej:et. A community dance will be held at the Treston school tomorrow night under the auspices of the Creston r'arent-T'-acher association. The dance i;i be from a to 11 o'clock. All par ents are invited to attend with their joung people. V. The Women's 'Juild of St. David's p.trnMi. of which Mrs. S. K. Joseph! is (resident, will ive a silver tea In the )ari.h house. Kast Twelfth and Kast Morrison streets, from 2 to 5 o'clock next Tuesday afternoon. .Mrs. Charles Edwin Senrs will en tertain the Professional WoirVn'K ieavue with a tea tomorrow in honor ot Mrs. II. -. V-.rtnian. officers of the ciub will assist. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Itichardson left TiM-sday for their new home ill Olats kanie, ht-reilr. Kicbardson will be ioc.il editor and publisher of the "latskanie Chief, a weekly newspaper. Mr. Ktrhardson n s formerly a mem ber of The Orcgonian staff. lr. and Mrs. I.. Booth will be at tome tonight to all alumni and for r.cr students rf iiberlin college. Pro- t' ;. , . ,. . . i - - r; m mi . Ha m 1 H I . . Sis ?1 3 1 Mi ' " ill Pi i'f - is aii a igj US ' . . ill Jijj- A I jl k;. ' 111 - - fin k tit ' . i H U . s - x If H - , - j ti M l S vt VJ 1 Pi . , 111 m ,,j,iiil in 1 1 1 r in. ii hi null torn n i-ij- Vko. jJfc-iiV .V. . H i street North. Tuesday. February 14. Luncheon will be served at 2 o'clock and a delightful afternoon is prom ised. The guest of honor will be Mrs. Julia M Stevens, oldest mem ber of the local auxiliary, who will soon celebrate her 70th birthday. She Ls a gold star mother, her son, Lieu tenant Stevens, having been killed at the .front. Members of the: aux iliary expecting to attend this party are asked to call Tabor -042 or automatic 319-79. The Y. "W. -f. A. vesper services next Sunday will be of unusual in terest to the young people of the city. Dr. Arthur S. Phelps will give his splendid lecture on "The Light in the East." Many strange and amusing things experienced, in a trip around the world will be told. There will also be some special music. The programme lasts from 4:30 to 5:30 and is followed by ' a "get acquainted" hour. At 5:45 practice by the Y. W. C. A. girls' chorus begins This chorus will be Kiad to welcome other girls into the group if they will report Sunday in the west corner of the social hall. . Mrs. Edith Collais Kvans is the director and Miss Hohberger the accompanist. HoiisioMPiDblQni? bt) Lilian Tinqlo MRS. K. J. t'OBBS HOSTKSS AT TEA FOR ARTS AND CRAFTS SOCIETY i. TODAY. f.sor W. I. Carr, on leave of absence from oberitn to carry on investigation- for the American Classic league will be the jruest of honor. An en tertains nit pro? mm me has been ar ranged. The ad'lrev? .s 798 Clinton street, corner of Eaat Twenty-fifth st ret t. Mrs. I A. Pattuilo will be hostess tomorrow night at an informal danc ing party. Sirs. J. Cummines left today for Taconvi to spend "the week end with friends. The WeHesIey 1 elnb will meet Sat urday afternoon t the home of Miss Marjorie MeGuire. 818 Lovejoy street Owing to Miss McGuire's illness, her mother, Urs. Hugh MeGuire. assisted by Miss Alice Wilhelm, will act as hostess. Mr. F. H. Lewis will entertain for her daughter. Miss Jmogene Lewis. Saturday afternoon. Eighteen young girl friends of Miss Lewis have been atked for the luncheon. . Society and musical patrons are awaiting with Interest the concert of March 6 at the Multnomah hotel when Mrs. Susie Fennell Pipes will appear again in the Pipes-Hutchinson-Kon-rad chamber music trio. This will be the first of a series of three concerts. Howl Earned Mtr Hnrf Dollar' a PVfs nrr Jut bt'low the f!bf. Have fiv- or dtx dozen buttons like material. i wrut fT I ivouliI iKe to use a a irmiuiirtK j M" you think I'lfus'' It't ni know" what fcind of ma i tihI to ue Hni how much. Many thank XKI.1-AALAR1SK. ZeHaalartTO Your Fplendid sketch earned my first . . , nrt , Qno,h.r w,? in whIh newspapers In I lo Kain that line and also a change. Oakland, t'al.." said Mayor Baker. (Combine your material with either a -in .ri ration rrt .iiirr i.4 n-r .nrl o- I black or jade georgette, the latter ins to ehool, I ust-U lo help unload lumber schooners an lake home for fuel. Another wy 1 had of helping to keep our house warm in the winter was to follow 4 TT KT ine see. I 1 ,J doilar at-lling front extends to the left. The skirt should have two rows of this trm. Wear a narrow girdle of serge with sections of the- black rings held to gether with the strand of the tan silk. A blue hat w'lh a smart tan and henna-edged bow would be a delightful finish to a practical and stunning frock. coal carts w hen t hey reached rough M reets and pick up coal that droped ff these (Hits Sometimes the drivers would help us kid out by heaving ca off, too." "It all cornea back to me." said ;ori?e H. Thomas, school director. When 1 wa somewhere between IwAcfivili' 10? would be stunning, and have an tin- t.r-t?i-iii- nf ihn punnnittu 1 1 1 r get bark to eck ioone kimono sleeves and caught in a band of your material at the wrist. lse your present waist as a wide strip slightly gathered at the! a N Important'event in the progress shoulder to the plain bairk of black. I of the women-8 ciubs in Portland which has no connection with the ( ,....,. . , . front and th.,s exposes the open sides 111 be the breaking of the ground of the gorgette. Let one front strip for the Tortland Woman's club per crors in low surplice linr'. giving as nianent home on Taylor street, be lt will the long line you desire. The tween Twelfth and Thirtenth. Satur skirt needs no change of line, bnt a day afternoon at 3 o'clock. Mrs. Ida charming effect will he found in a bit B. Callahan, president of the state . , . . . . . .. .. i, n t " iimt.t,i k it.n- jn me j.i.'c icucrauun. win mirnu ana mere win nna . ' 1 . ' ,j ,rt which shouid outline one of the f low- be speakers of prominence in club i .... 1 1 . . . . ... - .- .. . - . a skillet. A neighbor paid me ex actly 1 for it. I've been in the ronndry and machine business eer Mni-f." . l can recall very easily how 1 earned my first dollar." declared John H. liurcard. insurance man. yes terday. "The dirt used to gather be tween the cobble stones lit the old-t-shioned pavement in Albany. New York. It became a problem with the itv cfficiaJ.t to find a means to elimi nate the dirt. Klnally they hired hoe to do the work. 1 was one of the lads-and in the work earned my first dollar." a "l" knocked some aspiring young bantamweight kicking in seven rounds for the first dollar 1 ever earned." quoth Lou Wagner, attorney, as he recalled memories of his kid days in Portland. "It was my first appearance as a box-fighter and 1 was scheduled to go rounds with some punk named Murphy. 1 dropped lira for the count in the seventh round and got just 17 for my wwrk. 1 don't Just recall, but I think the faro hank got that first money I ever earned." ers here and there and center with i and city affairs. Mrs. CharleT K. Run- yon is president of the Portland Wom an's club. silver thread. On the left ftde have a knee-length panel of the georgette with the pecot edge with the overcast stitch clone in the silver. Finish the ei.il with baNs of jade si:k as used in the handwork. Problems f Dfcsmab'iyC i. n t. D.-k-- V M' a - rvr Mftdam Riehet Could 'OU P'MV if'; m w hi whmio if b'ue trirottn Cimmi with mott.tr ef r-d eeiet- a r-f-rrd tT Would ytt "vrr d - mny (Mn mairtal for on" of my l pe T My t'i)inpi-i.on i dln-k. hut my i4itn isn't very r hut. or nl while. t mjui whil kind f everyday f hut h bst u H - 1 ? Thnkinc u vry muh fr all the Information. AIRS. M. F. U RS. M F. I There are many re quests for combinations and I o not recall your particular dress plan, btit in all probability it was a i:fcrk blue and for th eyelets 1 ad Hed the cherry red. Of course, you can wear the thin materials and I ttiti sure there are colors well suited to one of your complexion. A tur quoise blue or a black with touch of the red would be good. For th everyday wear there is nothing nicer than the one-piece serge, tricolette or the Jersey, the latter always lending it self well to the Jumper type. The ruder blouse of the voile. hatiMe or t. wn being in keeping- The pongee s also worn, but for you I would not List the cbde. For the more dressy i oek. sum as you would use in the jfternoou or evening as the season Htt anoe. have a foulard or taffeta prtU'y trimmed in the bandings or handwork. You are most welcome for the help here given. lOHTI.AXI. or. .In. in -"Hr Madam Rn-h' l I hnv- 5 ard of yttipU' ni; tfriji! S" im-h'! w ld-. Would you advtw rombtnmc it with s.imci turn: and wh.t tvt of itrc.i wiiui'l yu .surir at ? I am i f-et 4 lnehen tall, welsh 130 r -untli, fatr. witn very intlr c'r. 30 i-ar old. Thanktns you. Vourn truly. J. O. V. T. O. I. I think a letter to you was answered two weeks ago and appeared in one of the daily issues. The "suit dresses" will be very popu lar for the spring season ahd your material will lend itself well to such a type of dress. 1 would suggct-t a long oblong vest of at least nine Inches, the lower end having the pointed line rather than the straight across. Out the portion of your blouse which comes below t he vest to the side and let that line follow to the skirt5. bottom edge. The waist should be slight I y bloused and t hf--,set-ii. sleeves lone and wider at the" wrist. A finely tucked vest of the bat iste. also the col la r and cuff will add a fresh touch lo the frock. For the hand trimming I would like to "see" a block pattern done in the tan snd black nu floss, the placing of the blocks being In alternate posi tion. There ia need for but one on tie w aist and that to he where the The Portland Woman's club will hold its regular meeting today at 2 o'clock in the hall room of the Mult nomah hotel. The programme will be a most interesting one for Mrs. John M. Scott. Mrs. Cora Puffer and frs. T. C. Taylor will- tell of trips made abroad during the past year. Dr. Ksther Pohl Lovejoy, who has re cently returned from the east, will tell something of her work while there. M. 1 Keller will entertain with a group of songs.- Refreshments will be served by the social commit tee. - All members of the American Le gion atixtliary whose birthdays oc curred during the months of January and February will be honored at a birthday party at the home of Mrs. Ij Sorenson. S3f Fast Fifty-eighth PORTI-A ND, Or. My Tea.r Miss Tingle: I think the "old batch" who wants a cake recipe may like mine, which a friend gave me, called Faultless cake, which X send you. I get much help from your hints. Thanking you. MRS. I. H. FAULTLESS CAKE Mrs. H.) Two euics. 2-8 cud Hweet crenm. 1 cup sugar, pinch salt, 1 teaspoon vanila. 1 ? cuds flour. 2 teaspoons baking powder. Mixing method Add sugar and cream, stir for a minute, then break In the egg, add rait and vanila, then sift in the flour with the baking powder, beat all "together for three , minutes : can be baked in layers or whole loaf. It makes a good-sized cake If in layers, is good put together witn Hny kind of frosting or flinog, is excel lent with whipped cream. . 1 use this foundation for so many dif ferent kinds of cakes. I have a chocolate cake by adding 2-3 cup ground chocolate or a prune cake by adding 1 cup stewed prunes chopped fine, with 1 teaspoon soda stirred In the prunes and J.4 teaspoon cinnamon and cloves. I also have a spice cake by adding H teaspoon each of nut- mete, cinnamon and cloves. It is my most successful recipe, and takes so little time in mixing. H Jf ANY thanks for your recipe. 1YJL am glad you (find this column helpful. Let roe know if there is ever any special hlp you want. PORTLAND, Or-. Jan. 22. Dear Miss Tinple: Could you give me (in The Daily Oregonian. a recipe for a "Swiss meat pancake"; also for "Swiss eggs." Thank int; you. MRS. B. W. S. I hope- the following may be what you want, but without a description I cannot guess very well. Swiss Meat Pancake Add a few seedless raisins to 1 cup fine chopped cold meat, seasoning to taste with salt, paprica, grated lemon rind and juice, a few grains mace or nutmeg and about teaspoon sugar. Moisten with stock or cream, make a thin batter with 1 pint milk, 3 eggs and 1 pint flour with 14 teaspoons salt. Then drop in rounds of desired size on a hou - well-greaged frying pan. Put a little of the prepared rmeat in the middle and fold over, removing the filled pancakes as finished to a not pianer. oerve wilii a guuu urown sauce and a border of chopped spinach. Swiss Eggs Butter a flat fireproof earthen dish and cover, with grated swiss cheese; cover this with very thin slices of bread (with crusts cut off, spread with a mixture of soft ened butter and French mustard. Cevi-r the slices of bread with thin slices oft Swiss cheese and sprinkle with paprica, salt and finely chopped chives. Break 6 eggs very carefully over the ' cheese, cover these with thick cream sprinkled with grated cheese and bake in a rather quick oven until the eggs are set. Serve with green salad and French dressing a3 the main dish of a simple luncheon. LICENSE EMMS HALTS END OF CAKDROOM INVESTIGA TION AWAITED. Artist Reported Missing. OLTMPIA, Wash-. Feb. 9. (Spe cial.) Fred L.a Fontaine, an artist. has been reported to the police as mysteriously disappearing from thjs city. For months I-a Fontaine and his two do;rs, one a Siberian wolf do? and the other "a German police doR. were familiar figures on the city's streets. The missinjr man is de scribed as shabbily dressed, about 40 years of age, feet tall and dark .of complexion. Mayor Baker Declares Many Places Where Young Men Drop Earn ings Will Be Abolished. No cardroom licenses will be is sued pending the investigation of the cardroom situation in Portland, an nounced Mayor Baker yesterday fol lowing refusal by the council to grant a license to the "Waldorf bil liard parlor for a 40-table cardroom at Broadway- and Washington streets. "There are over 250 cardrooms in the city of Portland." said Mayor Baker, ."but when we get through with the housecleaning that has been inaugurated I don't believe there will be 50 of them operating. "Cardrooms will not be permitted to operate simply, as a commercial proposition," explained the mayor. "They are given licenses to provide clubrooms for workingmen who have not the means to avail themselves of various established clubs in the city. It was the idea of the city administration to provide some places in the city where the man without family or home might spend a few hours off the streets. "But it was never intended that the cardrooms should spring up like mushrooms throughout the city, at tracting young men where they drop their earnings. Many of these places are nothing more than gambling Joints and they must go." In the case of the Waldorf bil- iiard parlor, the plan presented to the council by F. M. Clark, one of the nronrietors. included the instal lation of a cafeteria as well as 40 card tables. Mayor Baker objected to the con sideration of the application on the grounds that the investigation ' of cardrooms had just been inaugurated and that none of the members of the council were in a position to judge whether the application should be granted. The mayor stated that he would oDPose granting a license, but the application was withdrawn before any action could be taken on it. A committee of the council, includ ing City Commissioners Barbur, Bigelow and Pier, are now " inves tigating the feasibility of increasing the license fee for cardrooms to such a figure that none but reliable per sons financially can operate. It is believed that a substantial increase in the license fee for cardrooms will result in many of the small "bucket shoDs" drooping out of business. Mayor Baker has also proposed that a limit be set on the number of cardrooms and if this suggestion is adopted it is more than likely that some action by the council will be taken to weed out many of the exist ing cardrooms. Pending the entiro investigation, however, no new licenses will be is sued, and it is certain that when the investigation is at an end It will take some convincing arguments to win the councils approval to tne granting of any cardroom license. Your Grocer Recommends Albers Quality Grocers like to sell Quality Products that's why they recommend Albers Flapjack have confidence in their grocer's recommen dation hence you'll find Albers Flapjacks the hot cakes of the West. Order a Package From Your Grocer State to Pave Near Chehalis.. CHEHALIS, Wash., Feb. 9. (Spe cial.) When the city of Chehalis paves East Market street this spring the state will pave one-nan mile from the city limits to the Napavine corner, if recommendations lust an nounced by Deputy Engineer Glllis are carried out by the state highway department. The road is a portion of the Pacific highway. Mr. GUlis pro poses that since the city's proposed new pavement will be 30 feet wide to the limits the state make the road 28 feet wide the half mile to the point where the concrete roadway be gins and the old macadam road makes a turn to Napavine. f?t Y ' ;; if at-vv j; a-. , T. i V-fT- X f . I I m " """" ' -h .Jl.J k 1 Jj Farmers Buy Fertilizer. MONTESAKO, Wash.. Feb. 9. (Spe cial,) Farmers of Grays Harbor county, through the farm bureau, have Ms, Outfitters for- Childrerv, J Please Nfcrfce New Address 391 Washington St. Opposite Hazelwood be sure! get the original Green Chile Cheese :uMMMHntiuHHUiniinuMHnniMui Carefully sealed cylindrical con tainer insures absolute sanitation ordered 18 tons of superphosphate andi one "ton of potash. vThe shipment will arrive by boat from Aberdeen the latter part of this month. . Ac cording to Robert Cowan, county agent,, who .arranged the order, this amount of superphosphate will ter- uoed on oat and clover fields, though some berry raisers are among the purchasers. Scout Troop Organized. ABERDEEN, Wash., Feb. 9. (Spe- and vicinity waa organized at the Porter Methodist Episcopal churMx ton ght. Special patriotic singing was one of the features oi the meet ing. I'arents and friends of the class attended in large numbers. Rev. Mr. Cowdy of Satsop and Porter is in ti'ize 120 acres. Most of it will be I cial.) A Boy Scout troop for Portercharge of the trooiV Vs ,M-fcwW-A.,. Nil .r,i xr- A Heritage rom Colonial days that cravings forjhetastemdple E I'-HtTI.ANr, r. Jn 1. rt-r M.tm K . h-t I rJ ur r.fumu fvery dy ami r !jt K-r n won.i-rful hip l m Voir t a !r! milrrul ml wktt-h. mu h iomr than I a m. as it .i a wnu I w "ry thin Am j-- o!. - fret S inch- tall, Kait. 30 wiM. 43 hip. Hv rt-dibrown t-.:r riil b . w- f. Tb k-r. w m !tr:eht full twn-WKtlh. 31 imh' lon. n4 m m-b f-rd Th i. .Kt-- i- .ii-n The ni K quite low m thf fru.it nnd Hi'Si- m tam-bxr-. on tath aide it lit trvoi that i ceuit Itn tuu The begii-ning oa perfect day starts with a cup of (Swells n onee 1.800.000 cup were served at tin PAN. PACIFIC Intecnati'""' !""OSIT10N- -AST TOM EAT DAVIDSON'S IDEAL The good white bread whole wheat bread Health bread They're different" Kracked Wheat Bread The new Bread it contains everything , needed in good bread and many things not found in ordinary bread. TRY IT YOLTLL LIKE IT BAKING CO. DAVIDSON'SBREAD SOLD BY LEADING DEALERS FRIENDLY redskins came to the early colonists, bring ing to them the secret of the "sugar tree" their first taste of maple. . A flavor distinctive, alluring, unforgetable I And so the craving for it has spread with New Englanders everywhere a delicious heri tage from colonial 'days. Enjoy that maple flavor today in Log Cabin Syrup. In this syrup, choice sugars from New England and Canadian maple groves are blended with just enough pure sugfar of cane and nothing else to maintain always the same mellow and delicate maple flavor. Use Log Cabin generously on pancakes and waffles; use it to make rich-flavored frostings to pile on your layer cakes, as a toothsome sauce for ice-cream, blanc mange, or custard! It's hard to stop once you think of the good things you can make with Log Cabin Syrup. Genuine Log Cabin Syrup remember, comes only in log-cabin-shaped cans three sizes. . At your grocer's! The Log Cabin Products Company, St. Paul, Minnesota. Syrup - 101 fcl