12
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1922
11
B
RIDGE is In high favor with-
society. And after the after-!
noon has been passed at cards
additional friends drop in for tea
while over the tea cups plans for
the opera are discussed, and so Lent
isn't such a dull time after alL
Yesterday many of the most promi
nent society women assembled in the
r.eaeon hotel for the bridge party
Kiven by the League of Women
Voters. The affair was Quite smart
in point of attendance and from the
standpoint of gowning.
Mrs. Charles F. Rerg was hostess
at a luncheon and bridge on Saturday
her home on Willamette Heights.
' For Miss Julia Chemin, Miss Oskie
liotan and Mrs. Harry Clarke, who
will leave on March 31 for Europe,
several bridge parties are being
(riven. Yesterday Mrs. Thomas Brit
tian Foster was hostess at an after
noon for. the members of the bridge
club of which the honored guests are
members.
On Saturday Mrs. William M. Cake,
Mrs. H. V. McClean and Mrs. F. W.
Fish dispensed hospitality at a
bridge luncheon at the Nortonia,
honoring the Misses Cherain and
Rotan and Mrs. Clarke. The rooms
were artistically decorated in green
ery and white flowers. Ten tables
were arranged for the main diver
sion of the afternoon and about 15
other friends came in for tea to join
the bridge devotees and pay their
respects to the honored guests. Out-of-town
women entertained were Miss
May Chadwlck, Mrs. Homer Smith
and Mrs. Marjorie Lovelace, all of
Salem. Miss McElroy played piano
selections and Mrs. Mullen sans:.
" On Friday Mrs. Thomas McCusker
gave a tea and bridge an bad red
and white aa table decorations. Mrs.
W. O. Fouch poured and Mrs. William
Cake cut ices.
Mrs. H. A. Peoples was hostess on
Thursday at five tables of bridge at
her home on Stout street, entertain
ing for the same trio for whom so
many other parties are planned.
On next Thursday Mrs. J. D.
Leonard will be hostess for Mrs.
Clarke and the Misses Chemin and
Rotan and on Friday Miss Murphy
of Alexandra court will give a dinner
in their honor. On Friday afternoon
Mrs. Richard Everding will be a
bridge hostess for Miss Chemin.
Mrs. Stanley Smith will, entertain
at bridge on Monday and on Tues
day of next week Miss Pauline and
Miss Ella Rummelin will be hostesses
for the same three for whom the
other parties are scheduled.
Miss Chemin, Miss Rotan and' Mrs.
Clarke will leave the last of the
month to sail from New York for
Italy and to remain abroad for about
six months.
Several luncheons were given yes
terday preceding the bridge party at
the Benson. Mrs. J. B. Montgomery
was hostess at a small luncheon in
the Aleier & Frank tearoom, for a
few friends who later attended the
card party.
Mrs. Nellie Gates Williams will
have as her guest for the week her
.laughter, Mrs. Benjamin L. Burroughs
(Mildred Gates Magoon), of Pendle
ton, who will be here for the sea
son of grand opera and who will be
enterained extensively. Mrs. Bur
roughs is prominent in social and
musical circles. She has many friends
4n Portland, her girlhood home.
Mrs. James B. Kerr will leave this
week for the .east to pass the spring
vacation with her daughter. Miss
Polly Kerr, who is attending Co
lombia university. New York, where
she is taking a post-graduate course.
Miss Ida Boyd, guest of the C. S.
Jacksons, will leave on Thursday for
J"4
ill
V
i
- 1
' 3
Steffens-Colmer.
MRS. JAMES MULCHAV, WIFE OF1 PROMISEXT RAILROAD MABT, WEL
COMED OS HER. RETURN TO PORTLAND.
her home in Pendleton,
lightful visit.
after a de-
Mrs. Lee Hoffman has returned
from a visit of several months in the
east and is 'being welcomed1 by so
ciety.
Mrs. Daniel Dalton Madden (Rhoda
Rumelin) will visit Portland next
month and will be the guest of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.
Rumelin. Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Ashley
recently visited California and were
entertained by Mrs. Madden.
Mrs. J. B. Robinson has as her
guest her nephew. F. C. Charman,
purser of the steamer Keystone
State, plying between Seattle-and the
orient. Mr. Charman's home is in
Seattle, but he has many friends
here. . ...
The many friends of Mrs. E. B.
Gaze will .be sorry to know that she
Is at her home suffering from the
results of a fall from the train step
at Briarwood station.
'
There is a friendly rivalry among
the nearby towns regarding the num
bers of their society nd musical
folk who will attend grand opera.
Salem has quite a- long list among
whom are:
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Jenks, Mr. and
Mrs. John J. Roberts, Mr. and Mrs. Will
iam H. Burghardt, . Mr. and Mrs. F. G.
Delano, Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Meyers. Mr.
and Mrs. H. H. OHnger. Mr. and Mrs. W.
E. Kirk, Dr. and Mrs. Grover C. Bellinger,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter -Winslow, Mr. and
Mrs. P. E. Zimmerman, . Mr. and Mrs.' W.
Pearce, Mrs. Max O. Buren, Mrs. - George
I. Staley, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Richards.
Mr. and Mrs. John L. Rand, Dr. and Mrs.
John R. Sites. Mr. and Mrs. H. V. Conn-
ton, Mr. and Mrs. Asahel Bush, Mr. and
Mrs. J. A. Churchill, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Denton, Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Deckebach,
Mr. and Mrs. F. S. Lamport, Mr. and Mrs.
Elliott Colony, Mrs. W. P. Lord. Mrs.
George A. White, Mrs. A. M. Vassall. Mrs.
Martin Fereshetian, Mrs. Hal D. Pattoh,
Mrs. William Everett Anderson, Mrs. T.
G. Galloway, Mrs. Carl Webb, Mrs. Will
iam Hamilton, Miss Elisabeth Lord, Miss
Mario Churchill. Miss Dorothy Chambers,
Miss Luetic Ross, Miss Margaret Fisher,
Mias Delia Amsler, Miss Hilda Amsler,
Miss Charlotte Zieber, Miss Eugeni Zie
ber. Miss ,Gretehen Kramar, Miss Elta
White, Miss J. Hurd. Miss J. Boentse, Miss
Mable Robertson, Miss Elizabeth Putnam.
Miss Lena Belle Tartar, Miss Alma Pohl.
Miss Dorothy Pearce, Mies Helen Pearce,
Miss Frances Richards. Miss Rosalie
Buren. Miss Henrietta White, Miss Myrtle
Knowland, Miss Mary D. . Sehottle. Miss
Lyda Ulmer, R. E. Shannahan, J. W.
Chambers Jr., Ivan 1 G. Martin, John
Coughlin, Leon Jennison, G. A. Niles, Mr.
and Mrs. C. P. Bishop, Mr. and Mrs. G. K.
Schuneman, Miss Joy Turner.
mm
Mr., and Mrs. Dent Mowrey were
hosts at an artistic tea-musicale Sun
day . afternoon. The honor guests
were Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Zimmern,
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Scholz and
Avard Fairbanks, sculptor. Assisting
at the tea table were Mrs. Henry
Ladd Corbett and Mrs. George Max
welL Mr. Fairbanks . will lecture at
the arts and crafts tea next Friday.
.,
' Miss Marguerite Gleeson of Salem
was a visitor in Portland and was
guest at an informal luncheon given
in her honor. .-
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Mulchay,
and children, Ruth, May and James
orchid. The line of -this model is de
lightful ' and one which is always
good.
The tan sample is an imitation of
the Bohemian embroidery and could
be used on your linen for the front
rather than the material suggested
and the wider also used for the lower
sleeve trim, introducing the colored
rope sHk or, worsteds throughout the
design. The other sample is the em
broidered mull and a white waist will
be effectively trimmed with same.
Use the, Russian blouse type or use as
a vest as on page 39, model 3212.
PORTLAND, Or. Dear Madam Richet:
I come again thanking you for the helpful
suggestions which were very good, though
you did not state what fashion magazine
the model was to be found in. - You said
on page 2S, dress 3566. I am 49 years,
weigh loO, and do not want the low necks
as I do not wear them, nor a vest or a
wide one for everything I have is vest.
I might wear the round neck if high
In the back of neck, but how to get into
it is a problem. I enjoy reading . your
Jr., have returned from California to M we. Ti ,f r y
-tne t tlt d a -vr tvt
make their home in Portland.
older son, Roland, is a student at
Stanford university. Mr. Mulchay is
general freight agent for the Southern
Pacific and Mrs. Mulchay is, socially
popular.
Mrs. Alfred E. Zimmern will lecture
Friday morning for the junior league.
Her subject will be "The Music That
France Has Given to the World."
This will be one of the series of
lectures given for the league's charity
fund. The lectures are held in the
First Presbyterian church house at
10:30 A. M.
Mrs. John Parke will return the
latter part of the week from Wash
ington, . where she spent several
months with her daughter. Miss
Genevieve Parke j
t i
James A. Pennie of Sales, Alberta, 1
Is passing a few days in the city as
the guest of relatives. He is being I
entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Lucien
Bracy of 81 East Thirtieth street
North.
Mrs. Charles Heinline of Roseburg
will be the guest of Mrs. Fred L.
Olson for the opera season. Mrs.
Heinline is head of a conservatory
of music and past president of the
Oregon State Music Teachers' asso
ciation. Mrs. Olson will entertain
Wednesday at a luncheon at the
Portland hotel for her. Among those
Mrs. M. N. How very stupid of me
to overlook such an important factor
as the name of the bodk. If you will
kindly turn to the Designer Quar
terly; page 28, No. 3566, you will find
there the dress referred to. I am
truly sorry and trust that others have
not suffered the same loss of time.
tnj Lilian Tiaqlp
PORTLAND, March 13. Dear Miss Tin
gle: I would like to know bow to make
Maraschino cherries, ' and thank you for
recipe for same. Inclosed please find self
addressed and stamped envelope. Thank
ing you very kindly for a reply, I am very
truly yours, S. M. 3.
COURSE it la "not possible to
make real maraschino
0F
cherries
in a prohibition country. Various
kinds of imitation maraschino cher
ries are inade commercially or at
home. Many commercial processes
are unsuitable for home use.
At this season .the easiest way of !
making imitation maraschino cher
ries at home is to dve (with fruit
coloring) any firm, white, canned
pitted cherries and flavor to taste
with almond extract or a mixture of
who recently have made reservations I almond extract and vanilla or almond
for the opera are Mrs. ' Leland A
Mentzer, Medford; Miss Cornelia
Marvin, Salem; Miss Louise Siler,
Mossy Rock, Wash.; Miss Marie
Jasperson, Rainier;- Mrs. F. L. Bal
lard, Corvallis; David P. Nason, Ta-
:oma; Miss Catlin's school, Hill Mili
tary academy; Mrs. John C. Lewis,
Mrs. Thomas G. Hailey, Dr. and Mrs.
C. E. Sears, Misses Josephine and
Elizabeth Hoben, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Farrell, Governor and Mrs. Olcott
and W. K. Newell, Eugene.
Mrs. Maurice - Leader will arrive
from Pendleton . tomorrow to attend
the grand opera season.
One of the recent events1 of interest
was a St. Patrick's party given oy
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Rogers on Friday
at their home. 1029 Fremont street
Many out-of-town people were among
the guests, and a most enjoyable eve
ning was spent in playing "500" and
dancing. The house was beautifully
decorated in keening with the day, it
being a bower of tinted carnations
and roses. Thirty-five were seated
at a specially arranged table, the
color- scheme being carried out in
every detail. Among those present
were: Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer' A.
Howe of Tacoma, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Elder of Tacoma, Mr. and Mrs. Tom
McGuire of Sandy, Fred Gilbert of
Sandy, Mrs. C. D. Beckingham of Se
attle, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Hanning, Mr.
and Mrs. C. D.- Christensen, Mr. and
Mrs. J. Logie Richardson, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph A. Straub. Mr. and Mrs.
John M. Joyce,. Mr. and Mrs. M. J.
Sweeney, Mr. and Mrs. Walter G.
Fortmannn, Mr. and Mrs. George E.
Matthews. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Fennell,
Mr. and Mrs..H. V. Carrington and
Harry Hagen.'' .
and rose, as preferred.
When the cherry season is nearer
and more readers are likely to be
interested, I will print other sugges
tions for making various kinds of
imitation maraschino cherries from
the fresh fruit. In the meantime, if
you are interested in commercial
canning methods you can obtain some
technical books on this subject from
the Portland public library. It is
never possible for me to make per
sonal replies.
1
i i
A MEETING of the travelers' aid
committee will be held Thurs
day at 11 A. M. at the T. W. C. A.
There will be a discussion of the
transportation agreement and a full
attendance of members is requested.
A new feature of the work is the
, movement toward inter-city co-opera
tion and to this end clubwomen in
the various towns and cities of the
state are being asked to co-operate
in meeting and assisting girls going
to distant towns to live, also in some
cases to make investigation in home
towns of girls coming to the city.
- One case of recent occurrence was
that of a young woman, who came
from a distant city who, after a test
was made at the city health depart
ment, was found to have the mentality
of a 10-year-old child, though she is
30 years of age, and at present is
being cared for in an institution here,
i
- The Woman s Psychic club will
meet in the church parlor. East
Seventh and Hassalo streets, tomor
row afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mr. and
Mrs. Hill will give messages and
members and others interested are
invited.
. About 10 Rebekahs attended the
14th annual convention of district
No. 18, which was held at Cascade
Locks. Annual reports read showed
the lodges have been most pros
perous. Members of the Tuesday Afternoon
club will be entertained this afternoon
at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Will
iam Cavanaugh, 1027 Westover road.
JEFFERSON, Or., March 20. (Spe
cial.) The Woman's club of this city,
an aggressive organization which
meets regularly for the cultural im
provement of its members, gathered
recently at the home of Representa
tive David H. Looney, when an ad
dress on "The Oregon Trail" was
s:iven by Miss Addie Libby, an origi
nal recitation, "The Song of Chehul
lium" by Miss Marguerite Looney and
Memories of a Trip Across the
PlainB" by Mrs. I). H. Looney. The
DYE FADED WRAP
SKIRT, DRESS IN
"DIAMOND DYES"
Each package of "Diamond Dyes"
contains directions so simple any
woman can dye or tint her old worn,
faded things new. Even If she has
never dyed before, she can put a rich,
fadeless color into shabby skirts.
.presses, waists, coats, stockings,
vteators. coverings, draperies, hang
ings, everything. Bay Diamond Dyes
-in) other kind thon perfect home
dye.ns is guaranteed, just leu your
lru?sist '.vheihor liio material you
with to dye is wool or silk, or
tviiechcr it ia linen, cotton, or mixed
ic.&ds. Diamond Uvea never streak.
spot, fade, or run. Adv.
latter was made up of extracts of a
letter written by Jesse Looney dur
ing the fall of 1843 to relatives in
the east telling of a trip of the first
emigrant train.
Daughters of the Covenant will
meet tonight at the B'nai 3'rith build
ing. There will be a business session
and programme.
Sunnyside Parent-Teacher associa
tion will hold its regular meeting this
afternoon at 2:45 o'clock in the school
assembly. There will be a programme
by the children and interesting speak
ers. . -
Ben Butler v Relief corps will meet
at 2 o'clock this afternoon in room
525 courthouse. Luncheon will be
served at noon.
.
The Alameda Tuesday club will be
entertained this afternoon at 2 o'clock
at the home of Mrs. O. H. Becker, 927
Regents drive.
New members of the Rose City Park
Parent-Teacher association and the
teachers are to be honor guests at a
luncheon today at 1:30 o'clock. The
regular meeting of section B will be
held immediately following.
Alpha Gamma Delta sorority will
entertain for its members in the city
at a dinner tomorrow at 6 P. M. at
the Oregon grill. Visiting Alpha
Gammas also are invited to attend
and reservations should be made be
fore Wednesday noon by calling Be
atrice Quackenbush, Tabor 698.
One of the- important events of the
week will .be the annual card party
of the current literature department
of the Portland Woman's club tomor
row for the benefit of the building
fund. Mrs. H. L. Torrance is chair
man of the programme committee and
Mrs. Helen Fromme Schedler will be
soloist and Mrs. Robertson Cook will
read.
Oregon Rose camp, Royal Neighors
of America, will visit Magnolia camp,
at Lents, Or.. Thursday evening, leav
ing Second and'Alder streets at 7:30
o'clock. There will be no meeting in
Pacific States ball on that evening.
Rose Social club of the order held
a well-attended meeting at the home
of Mrs. Bertha Edwards Friday. The
next hostess will be Mrs. Ada Gerlach,
3629 Sixty-fourth street Southeast,
Friday, April 7. All Royal Neighbors
are invited. .
Kabid Coyotes Alarm Stockmen,
CANYON CITT, Or.. March 20.
(Special.) Reports from the forest
service in the Izee district of a num
ber of cases of rabid coyotes are
causing general alarm here. The re
ports came to the supervisor of the
forest office in John Day. They were
forwarded to Deputy Game Warden
Hazeitine. who has taken the matter
up with Stanley Jewett. predatory
animal inspector of the biological
survey. ,
by MadaniEicKer
golden brown hair.
LAUREL
ATHENA. Or. Dear Madam Richet: I
am a constant reader Af your columns ot
"Dre&smaking Problems,'; and have re
ceived a great deal of help from them, but
am writing to you for help myself now.
Will you please "help me plan my sum
mer wardrobe without too great an ex
pense ? -
I have a polo cloth coat for spring; and
fall, but -It is a little too heavy for sum
mer. Could you suggest something in a
wrap style for me?
I have dark brown hair and eyes, weigh
109 pounds, height 3 feet 4 inches and
am 18 years old.
Would a natural tan pongee dress
trimmed in blue be good for street wear?
What kind of a eood dress would you sug
gest? I have a navy blue spring suit of
tricotine. What kind of a blouse would
be good with it, also shoes and hat?
Thanking you in advance.
A. READER.
42 Inches, bine eyes,
good complexion.
Laurel. You can have a stunning
sport dress if you care to copy the
I model shown on page 22. No. 3211, of
the Butterick Quarterly. Have the
front inset and collar and cuff of the
henna linen or taffeta and embroider
along the edge in a band design of
conventional pattern. Tbijcwill make
a very smart costume.
With the abudance of material you
have in your skirt of dress No. 2 you
can have a frock as pictured on page
13, No. 3364, of the same magazine,
which is a splendid type for your
very unusual and pretty material.
Make over the silk slip of orchid and
have the' georgette panels of the
orchid. .Have the, shorter sleeve
rather than one as shown in your
sketch and wear with lavender hat.
'Your black and white sample will
make up perfectly in a type as seen
on page 12, No. 3453, same issue. The
collar and panel facings would be
effective if in a tomato shade or an
A
Golden Wedding Celebruted.
"JEFFERSON, Or.. March 20. (Spe
cial.) Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Stuart of
this city celebrated the 50th anniver
sary of their wedding last week.
They were married 'n North Carolina
in 3 872. They have four children
living in California, two in tho state
of Washington anil one in British
Columbia,
READER. Why not have the
one-piece dress with the cape to
match? The tricotine, serge, Canton
crepe or the. tweed are good fabrics
for such an outfit. The March De
signer shows a smart combination on
page 77, Nos. 3664, 3577. The blue
with the scallops of the geranium,
fuchsia or the Jade would be effective
and should be lined in the same
shade. The pongee trimmed as you
state will make , a nice spring dress
but be sure that you have the heavy
quality of pongee. For the "good
dress" I wonder if you would not like
the foulard or the tafefta. See the
dress in the Butterick Quarterly,
page 12, No. 3453. On page-39, No.
3547 is a pretty blouse to wear with
your suit. A fuchsia smocked in the
silver or a jade in the gold. Make up
in a crepe dehine. . -
ALBANY, Or.. Feb. 13. Dear Madam
Richet: Please suggest a way to make
over tan dress like sample inclosed. Waist
is made like picture, skirt has pleat down
center front seam and center f back:
length 38 Inches; width at bottom two
yards 23 inches; belt, with gathers let 'out.
3 1 inches; have several large pieces.
Another dress made of material and
like sketch No. 2. which 1 never liked, and
never wore' but few times. Material is 36
inches wide; skirt has three widths. 36
inches long; center front . of waist 20
inches; center back 24 inches; two Quarter
inch tucks oa shoulder front, shoulder and
under arm opening; loose sleeves.
Kindly suggest a way to make up 64
yards of 33-inch material like black and
white sample.
-What is the name of trimming like sam
ples inclosed, and what could they be used
for? I have 3Vb yards width of tan sam
ple and two yards of same three inches
wide; one yard 20 inches like rose.
I weigh 10 pounds, am 5 feet 3 Inches
tall, waist 30 Inches, bust 40 in ches. h i ps
PORTLAND, March 14. Dear Miss Tin
gle: Do you know of a recipe for Russian
Rocks, made of brown, sugar, nuts and
raisins ia the form of a drop cookie?
Thanking you. . "CL'LPER;"
Following is one recipe for "rocks,"
but I don't know whether they are
"Russian." Possibly some reader
may have a suggestion. A very large
number of different mixtures of a
density suitable for baking in rough
little heaps are called "rocks," so
that it is hard to identify any partic
ular kind. -
Rocks. One and one-half cups
brown sugar, 1 cup butter (or cup
Crisco or Snowdrift, with tea
spoon salt). 1 cup nut meats, roughly
chopped; 1 cup raisins (or dates) '
seeded and cut up; 3 eggs, teaspoon I
salt, 1 level tablespoon baking pow
der, about 3 to 314 cups flour (de
pending upon the kind used), a little
grated orange or lemon' rind or a
mixture of cinnamon and nutmeg, or
almond ' extract, or powdered carda
mom seed (or cardamom extract) or
vanilla, or a little cocoa and vanilla
may be used for flavoring, according
to personal taste. But if good but
ter is used it gives a delicious blend
of flavor with the brown sugar and
nuts that really needs no addition.
Cream the butter, beat in the sugar
gradually, then the eggs, one at a
time (unbeaten), with a tablespoon
of flour, beating well between each
egg. Beat in the fruit, then fold in
the remaining flour, sifted with the
baking powder. Too much flour
makes hard cookies, too little makes
the cookies spread too much. In
using a new flour 'it may save waste
to try one little rock in the oven
and see whether you have the right
texture.
Drop from a teaspoon 1 inch apart
on greased inverted baking tins.
WHETHER for an appealing breakfast or for
dainty luncheons or suppers, good toast is a
refinement of good bread the one food of which 90
per cent is quickly and easily absorbed as nourishment.
One reason why users of
Butter-Nut bread insist on
getting it at their grocer's is
because they have found Butter-Nut
makes the most perfect
toast,
.Because it is appetizing,
while losing none of the nour
ishment in the bread, toast is
the physician's favorite pre
scription, for delicate stomachs.
When ordering bread, be sure to ask for the loaf of
fine flavor and high food value the genuine AL
WAYS in its sanitary wrapper.
At All
Good
Grocers
hi-
The
Bread
Supreme-
THE UNITED STATES BAKERY
Capacity 75,000 Quality Loaves a Day
Bakers of Franz HEALTH BREAD
Bake in a moderate oven. Store in
a closed tin.
Half the above amount might be
enough to try the first time. They
keep well, hence the advisability of
usually making a good big batch at
a time.
Bread liaised at Tacoma.
TACOMA. Wash.. March 20. A
majority of the bakers here put into
effect today increased prices on
bread. The pound ana half loaf was
raised from. 13 cents to 15 cents, re
tail. The advance, it was alleged,
was made necessary by higher, prices
for flour, sugar and shortening.
Woman Juror. in Statntory Case.
MEDFORD, Or.. March 20.-(Spe-cial.)
Only one woman, Miss Issie
MeCully of Jacksonville," is en the
jury in the statutory case trial of
L. R. James, middle-aged laborer,
which was begun in circuit court
today, despite the fact that under
the new jury law in cases of this
nature one-half of the jury must be
women. District Attorney Moore and
the attorney for the defense, how
ever, both waived this right, owing
to the inability of ootaining women
to serv-e, all but Miss MeCully taking
advantage of the exemption clause
in the law. James is charged with
a statutory offense against a 15-year-old
school girl, and the chief wit
nesses are little girls.
Announcement
KT,rrirnecd btiyrrof UM 'IIVKR. Nil KF
I (KI.I I I..A IK mimI AMlMi K Fl KM
Tl Ktt 1m Iravlnir lur F.iikUbimI In thr rour
of m few lin.VN on m inlying trip. I'Rri if
who lfMlr arllrlet of thi imtnr ran writ
the Hlv"rtinr, kIvIiiic inrii ion. ajinrost
nmte price tliy are primrel to im-jt mul
hnnk rfrnrt. It Ivtujr I horourhly umlrr
Mtowl thfv tnt'tir NO obligation to bur
unlfM AUSOl.l 1 KI.V MMt.KfHM. when the
article Ih nliown them. No money required.
Itunk referenreN ft 1 veil on requetit. rite at
onee In.' confidence. S2H remberton blUf.t
icioria, U. C.
Candy Special
Cream Spa
An exquisite confection, con
sisting of a golden, hollow.
New Orleans molasses stick,
stuffed with a delicious cream,
made of pure cane sugar, corn
syrup, cream and butter. One
taste and they become a QOp
habit. Per pound m3
SWETLAND'S
Sweets of Better Qualltv.
28B-271 MORRISON STREET,
Between T hird and Fourth.
wets
NAIiONAI CRES1
.800.000 cuw were aervec
tha PANAHA-PACIFIC
fntermtioml EXPOSITION
In the
Wrong Gear ?
Does your heart-engine
pound when you climb the
stairs? It is a danger signal
that should warn you to eat
proper food jand take rational
daily exercise. Taking a hill
"on high" is easy for the man
who eats -
O
Safe
For Infants
& Invalids
the Food-0rinfe 6 Ail Agea.
Qzick Lunch at Home, face, and
AtsII lait&OQEs a&iitiSaSes
Eat it for breakfast, for dinner, for
lunch. Shredded Wheat contains
just enough carbohydrates and pro
teins to sustain the human body in
top-notch condition, also the min
eral salts that are so necessary to
life and normal growth.
Two Biscuits with milk or cream make
a complete, nourishing meal. Delici&us
with peaches, berries, raisins, prunes, .
sliced bananas and other fruits:
1 -MAWS
; Vanishing Cream That
iff I , Really Vanishes
MAVIS Vanishing Cream melts
fjt , into the skin and stays without
fM drying the skin. A superlative
U; base for powder and rouge,
jrfj MAVIS Vanishing Cream in-
ifjfi , sures you against coarsened
m VANISHING pores and rough skin.
III ( TOILETRIES
Si I " j T.lcumPW$ .2? Toil. W . $1.00
SJti I Face Powder . . .50 Cold Creun . . JO
V V y Compact 50 Up Socks ... J5
Sri- Poudre Creme . .50
ill fepi i v a u d o ufpxi5
ill J
I'M
p 8
i
i 2
Ml
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Bluhill Pimento Cheeso
is "some big hit" stirred in
Vegetable Soup
Bluhill Spreads Like Butter