10 rE engagement of lllsa Helen Haller and Harvey Nicol Black was announced yesterday at 'an attractive tea at the Haller home in Schuyler street. In the receiving line were Mrs. H. id. Hal ler, Mrs. "eagla P. Sealey. Mrs. Georg-e Black and Miss Haller. Patricia Temple and Harvey Haller Sealey presented the guests with cards which bore the announcement. At the" tea table were Mrs. Harry . Edward, Mrs. Roland Ijockwood, Mrs. W. H. Smith and Mrs. Robert H. Lord. Miss Margaret Bronaugh, Miss Miriam Weber, Mrs. Bryan Jenkins, Miss Patricia Smith and Mrs. Huntington Malarkey served. and assisting in the living room were Mrs. Arthur Nicolai and Miss . Agnes Black. The rooms were col orful in autumn foliage and late summer flowers. About 200 guests called. Miss Haller is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs H. M. Haller, who have long been residents of Port land. She is a graduate of Port land academy and attended a finish ing school in Washington, D. C Mr. Black, who is a graduate of Yale university and a member of Phi Delta Phi fraternity, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. George Blaek of Portland. No definite date has been set for the wedding, which will take place in the fall. The Kappa Alpha Theta sorority entertained a number, of the girls who are entering college this fall at tea yesterday at the home of Miss Georgiana Gerlinger on Wil lamette Heights. Many of the " visitors here for the Episcopal convention were enter tained at a tea yesterday afternoon in the auditorium basement, when the - women of St. Mark's and. St. Philips' parishes of the city and St. Mary's at Eugene and the Holy Spirit "at Sutherlin, Ore., acted as hostesses. Mrs. W. J, Henderson was chairman of the tea commit tee. Alternating at the tea tables were Mesdames Wallace Everton, James Mclndoe, J. B. H. Hazeltine, William Barker, Rogers Hastings, Edward Lyons, W. S. Sterling, W. T. Slater, R. F. Arndt, Archibald Wright. L. Russell. William Smith, Gage Hasleton, M. Parson. Frank Stillman. and the Misses Clara Rob inson, Jeanette Perkins, Virginia Wilson, M. Simpson, A. Barker and X. Townsend. Mrs. Gustave Bruere will leave! the end of the week for the east, where Miss Bruere will enter the! Bryn Mawr preparatory school. They will stop off in Spokane to visit Mrs. Harry Goldstein (Elizabeth Bruere). WHEN WINTER COMES, HERE'S ONE WAY TO KEEP COLD OUT. I v.s,s&jr ."hL ,a,.cju,L '&i?4" I if fJ I ' ill Mi, r i,A I -I If a it J urn'- - i 7te-. ,.; - u llr . ;aI VH "t f J ill y if-, - (-t Looking forvrard to the time when heavier garments will be the vogue, f ANbiOtt-setters have dextgned the above chinchilla coat. It is con sidered one of the niftiest of the season. An inter-fraternity dance will be given Saturday night at Murlark hall in honor of sorority and fra ternity men who will leave for col lege in the near future. National officers of the Girls' society of the Episcopal church who are delegates to the convention were honored- at a I terday afternoon tea given yes the main par lors of Hotel Portland. In the re ceiving line were Miss Frances N. Sibley of Detroit, national president of the Girls' Friendly society; Miss Sarah Hopkins of Worcester, Mass., president of province No. 1; Miss Marianna F. Ford of Aitken, S. C., vice-president of province No. 4; Airs. J. D. Herron of Cambridge, O., vice- president of province No. 5; Miss Mary K. Jacobs of Los Angeles, vice-prsident of province No. 8; Miss Alice Simrall of Cincinnati, O., chairman of the general conven tion committee; Mrs. Thomas Jen kins, president of Oregon branch, and Mrs. Walter Taylor Sumner. The tea table was presided over by Mrs. W. B. Stearns of Los An geles, president of Los Angeles I by Celia Soble. branch; Mrs. J. F. Winslow of Cin cinnati, and Mrs. James H. Perkins of Cincinnati. Miss Merriweather of Los Angeles sang a group of songs. A picturesque figure was Deacon ess Pepper, branch secretary of the society in the Philippines, who ap peared ' in native costume. An in teresting guest was Dr. S. L. Joshi, who was sent by the bishop of Bom bay to extend greetings of the church in India to the American Episcopal church. Dr. Joshi is in terested in establishing this society in India. . One of the most interesting social events of the week . was the tea given Tuesday afternoon in the blue room of the Hotel Portland by Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Houston of Philadel phia to honor Archbishop Gerassi mos, attended by Archdeacon An tony Bashier; Archbishop Pantelei mon. attended by Deacon Daid Leontarides; Bishop Aftimios. at tended by Father Boris, and Bishop Gorazd ' Pavllk, attenaea Dy ur. Lacey, all of whom are distinguished visitors to the Episcopal conven tion. The guests are representatives or the Greek church. Mr. Huston, who is one of the most prominent dele gates attending the convention, is accompanied by Mrs. Houston, a woman of much charm and distinc tion. About 250 guests attended the tea. Miss Pauline Bondurant and Miss Helena Barbara Pittelkau will be hostesses today at a tea at the home of the latter on Hawthorne avenue from t to 6 o'clock. Two hundred invitations have been issued to the younger set. Misses Bondurant anu Pittelkau are leaving bhou University of Oregon. m m Mrs. Henry Russell Talbot of Washington, D. C.. was tne mom for a beautifully appointed lunch eon at the Mallory hotel yesterday afternoon, when Mrs. Robert &ian field entertained. Covers were placed for Miss Harding, the daugh ter of Bishop Harding; Miss Rowe, the daughter of Bishop Rowe; Mrs. James Johns, Mrs. James B. Mont gomery, Mrs. Frederick E. . Judd, Mrs. Thomas H. Hailey, Mrs. John Ross Dickson, Mrs. John Keating and the hostess. About 125 maids and matrons called at the home of Mrs. E. Mc Farland Green, when she enter tained on Tuesday afternoon with a prettily appointed tea. Presiding at the tea table were Mrs. Lynn Davis and Mrs. C. E. Bade. Those assisting about the rooms were Miss Elizabeth Wiggins, Miss Janet Cattron, Miss Elizabeth Ettinger, Miss Dorothy Lyon, Mrs. Maurice Mann, Mrs. Edgar T. Kline. Little A'gnes Peters took the cards. Miss Olivia Gazzem of Philadel phia is the house guest of Mr, and Mrs. R. S. Howard. The Queators' club will give their first annual hop in the Portland ho tel assembly room tomorrow night. The patrons and patronesses for the event are Mr. and Mrs. Ben Selling, Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Berg, Mrs. R. W. Myers and Miss E. Friedman. The committee in charge is com posed of Elias Lichgarn, Willard Goldblatt, Herman Seminoff and Lester Friedman. As a feature the committee has arranged for a dance -g I I'f I 'T t'J PI l.iHIO-BUUJ "Til I lii I ' An Open Letter to a Certain Lady Dear Madam": You prefer the real thing to an imitation, don't you ? Of course, you know you can buy imitations of Armand Cold Cream Powder plenty of them. And usually they sell for less money. But don't be deceived. There is but one original Cold Cream Powder and it is Armand. We believe that no imitation , can possibly compare with it. Once you try it and compare its lasting adherence, its wonderful tints and perfect smoothness, we feel sure you'll agree with us. Armand con tains no white lead,vchalk, rice or zinc stearate. The price of Armand Cold Cream Powder is $1.00 and you receive full value in both powder and satisfaction. If you are not more pleased with it than with any other face powder you've ever used, you can return it and get your money back. Tha is the ad vantage in buying the original. Don't be satisfied with imitations of doubt ful quality. When you buy Cold Cream Powder, insist upon Armani - You'll find . that good dealers prefer to sen you Armand, because it is the one genuine, high quality cold cream face powder. Yours sincerely, ARMAND. Send tSc for the Armand Weekend Paekag. It contains generous boxes of Armand Cold Cream Powder, Armand Bouquet, Armand Rouge, Cold Cream, Vanishing Cream, Talcum and Soap and V the Armand 'Creed of Beauty." Address The ARMAND COMPANY, Des Moines, Iowa . St. Thomas, Ont. Mexico City, Mexico London, England Sydney, Australia - The Home in Good Taste. By Harold Donaldson Ebcrleln, Joint Author of "Practical Book of Interior Decoration," Etc. it T r1 r r Mb Wron bidey- L.uxtam- How to Make Curtains. In making glass curtains, be sure first to have accurate-measurements of the window at whioh they are to be hung. This will save much troublesome afteration afterward. If the bottoms are to be weighted and it is often advisable to weigh j thin, sheer material allow for a ; little stretching. The bottom of the J curtain should Just escape the sill. ' Make the bottom hems wide two and a half to three inches will not hA ton mnfi if till rurtains ar nnt ming. The hems at the sides may be either of the same or less width. The heading at the top should be an inch and a half to two inches deep. The rings by which the headings are attached to the rods may be sewn or hooked to the heading just below the top of the curtain. To make the curtains hang" well and keep them in place a leaded tape may be sewn inside the whole length of the bottom hem. If the curtains are trimmed with gimp, make both bottom and side hems not quite the width of the gimp and sew it on so that the fringe will Just come free of the edges of the hem. and serve as quickly as possible. Slow handling or a slow oven will spoil .it. If preferred a savory filling may be used and the sugar omitted. Or the pancake may be folded or rolled without filling and eaten with either syrup and butter or with a very rich brown beef gravy. A recipe for French omelet was given rather recently. I will repeat it V(hen the time limit expires. Following is one southern recipe for corn pudding, but perhaps some southern reader may contribute a better one. Corn pudding southern style Grate the kernels from five or six ears freshly picked sweet corn (about two cups when grated), beat in two egg yolks, one cup rich milk (or milk and cream, mixed), one tablespoon melted butter, one-half to one tablespoon sugar, one-half tea spoon salt (or "to taste"), a ti y pinch of soda and fold in two stiffly beaten egg whites, last of all. Turn into a greased baking dish and bake, covered, until firm, then brown. - This should have a light, puffy texture, like a souffle. For a richer type use three eggs to one cup milk. For a smoother, more custardlike texture, do not beat the eggs sepa rately, but beat both white and yolk together and add the milk"? corn, etc. Things You'll Love to Make. What's What. By Helen Deeie. tirmrrnnltiii In ! i'hit Irl Ribbon, Wool and Cardboard Are Used for This Fetching Girdle. Instead of ribbon, you" can use strips of silk with picot edges for this newest of girdles. Cover three inch rings of cardboard with wool of different colors. Either wind the wool around and around the rings or use a buttonhole stitch. Stitch three ribbons to each side of each ring. . Then tie tb,e groups of rib bons together leaving long ends. A girdle.of this sort is lovely on any one-piece frock. FLORA. M Ml ifiMuii n n I Jm raMteiM if fowAcltvili UoiiAld Problem? , btj Lilian Tinqlo PORTLAND. Or., Aos. 29. Dear Miss Tingie: I have benefitted by your ex cellent recipes published in The Orego tiian and would be giad if you could give ft recipe for German pancakes and French omelet, and. if you have space, for corn cooked In custard, southern style. A. W. I AM very glad you find this column useful. German pancakes are of many varieties. Following is one type. Write again, giving as close a description as possible, if this Is not the kind you had in mind: German pancake, No. 1 Two eggs, one cup milk, one cup sifted flour, half teaspoon salt, three level table spoons melted fat or butter. Use a very large frying pan that will go Into the oven. Sometimes a special pan is used. Have the oven very hot and heat in it the pan and short ening. Mix the eggs, milk and flour to a perfectly smooth, thin batter (about as thick as cream), thinner than for American pancakes. Pour into the hissing hot fat in the pan Just enough batter to cover the bot tom of the pan to a little more than one-eighth inch deep. Put into the hot oven and bake until brown and puffy. Remove quickly to a hot platter (face downward), spread with hot cranberry jam or other preferred lilling, roll or fold quick ly, sprinkle with powdered sugar -iTa lor churcn snouicl oe aco. ous that ought to go without say ing. Yet many girls wear their most conspicuously revealing gowns when they go to their various places of worship during the summer and early autumn season. A gown that is decorative and charming in its proper place, at an Indoor afternoon tea or reception or at a restaurant or theater party, may be gi-otesquely inappropriate for church raiment. This does not refer to the regular decollete evening gowns, which none but a lunatic would wear in the morning, but to the elaborate afternoon gowns, the bodices of which are cut as low as evening gowns, but which are veiled in net, lace or chiffon. These trans parencies are utterly out of place in church, where a girl who knows "What's What" in clothes usually wears the simplest tailored effects in one-piece or coat costumes. Correct English: Quiz. A Daily A Daily Quiz. Correct the sentence, "This is a good diet and if stuck to faithful will make you well." What is amiss with the sentence, "There has been several new cars delivered here this week"? What is a guimpe? How is it pronounced? Is it correct to say, "I am older than him"? Answers to Wednesday's Questions. An opus is 'a literary or musical work or composition. Opuscle. pronounced "o-pus'-kiul," is a small or unimportant work. A vocHtion is one's main calling or business in life. w An avocation is a divorsion or minor occupation which takes one from his vocation. U LTNOMAH county council Parent-Teacher association will meet at Lynch school. Section Line and Barker . roads, Saturday at 11 A. M. Autos will meet the 11 and 11:30 Gresham cars at Linneman station and the 10:30 and 11:31) Troutdale trains at Elwood station. There will be a silver tea at noon. Members of the Portland Woman's club are requested to meet at the clubhouse every morning this week. at A. St. Come prepared to sew. The women of Moosehart legion will give the first of a eeries of 12 "500" parties tomorrow afternoon in the Mooseheart temple, Fourth and Taylor streets. There will be at tractive band-made prizes given and the proceeds are for the benefit of the babies of Moosehart. The public is cordially invited. Blackman circle will have a social day tomorrow at the home of Ionia Hancock, 305 Emerson street West. A pot-luck luncheon will be eerved at noon followed by a social after noon, when each memner will pre sent a dollar, telling how it was earned. All are Invited. Take St. Johns car to Dflaware, walk two blocks south. , The Democratic Woman's club will meet today at 2 P. M. in the Journal auditorium. The programme will include a talk on "Know Your State"; Judge .Gatens will present "The Courts of Oregon"; Mrs. Alex ander Thompson, "The Oregon Legislature": Mrs. Alice McNaught, "Idealistic Education," and Dr. Elof T. Hedlund will talk on "Powers and Duties of Senate and House of Representatives." Virginia Lee Miller will be soloist. The Altar and Rosary society of St. Philip Nere's church will hold its first card party and social of the winter season tomorrow evening in the parish hall. East Sixteenth and Hickory streets. AU are invited. East Side Lavender club, Branch No. 1. will give a birthday party tomorrow- at 12:30 in the East Side Business Men's club rooms. The guests of honor will be members whose birthdays occur In April, May, ! June, July, August and September, i Chapter C of the P. E. O. sister hood will hold its regular meeting ( next Friday at 3 P. M., at the home of Mrs. W. A. Herman. A basket dinner will be served at 6:30 P. M., and the hostesses will be Mrs: Her man, Miss Nina Herman and Mrs. H. O. Bush. Members of the com mittee include Mrs. H. W. Bonham, Mrs. J. F. Beaumont and Mrs. W. L. Verry.. Th. Business Women's club will enjoy an unusually interesting pro gramme at its regular luncheon meeting today at noon at the Y. W. C. A. social hall. Right Rev. George Mott Williams, from Paris, France, win -speak on "Conditions in Ger many," and Mrs. Catherine Covach Fredrich will be soloist. Miss Flor ence Day will preside and Marie homers will be hostess. 8 35 K ll'" ' fc COLD CREAM POWDER, 32 The Housewife's Idea Box bijMad; Picker PORTLAND. I would like your ad vice on suicaDle materials, color style etc., tar one evenjr.jr dress not t-c foimiU or too low; ono afternoon dress, also waist to wear with navy blue tricotine lauurtsa sun, ana coat lor general wear, noc too tailored:. I have almost two oi loveiy gray net trlmmini, 2H incnes wide, a rose lining, 6 inches of suver tnreaa ana spangles; also design m suver mreaa ana Deads on ed Could I use on evening dress? Also nave several bunches of black rat-tali braid, which might be suitable trim for afternoon dress. I hie the over-blouse for waist; also long waist in aresses and circular skirt look well on mT, or semi-circular. I am 37 years oi se. waist aa incnes, Dust 38 inches, hip 43 inches, brown eyes, auburn brown hair, fair skin, with good color. I am 0 leet 7 incnes and weigh 160 pounds BUSY MOTHER. A Busy Mother. Your proportion needs the length-giving line and so I would have you see the model pictured in the Elite Styles for Oc tober, page 24, No. 4199-D. The sleeves can be added with little la Dor and the desired length. The set-in vest also can be made to come to a higher line should vou wish, With your rather full figure wear crepe ae cnme, as the duller fin ien does not increase the size as does the fabric with luster. This gown in a lovely orchid with trim ming in the light blue would be charming. Also on the opposite page, No. 4205-D, would be 'charm ing for you. Have the dove gray georgette with black lace trim. The flower girdle of flat-petaled roses in either silver or jade green. A lace sleeve would be a most at tractive addition. The lines of either are splendid for one of your good proportion. The neck on the last named can he higher and made in a rounded line. . , While you may not care for the extreme sleeve I am sure that stun ning model featured on page 13 of the October Style will charm you. The material I would have in dark fur green and in a duvetyn, the fringe in black sillc and the bead ing so well placed and clever in de sign in the jet and dark red irri descent. You can so well wear this type of dress that I do hope you will accept the suggestion. A perfectly fascinating blouse is shown in the Elite for October, page 19A, No. 4172. Have it in a blue canton crepe, matching the blue of your suit. The lower sleeve and the peeping slits of the black satin. Wear a narrow belt of the canton. With the gray net trimming why not copy the beautiful blouse from same page-and book Just mentioned? Combine, with the gray crepe de chine or crepe satin and have a well-made, two-piece skirt of the crepe. You will have a stunning gown and the skirt you can wear next summer for a sport outfit. It would seem that your net was made for this model. - s Oregon license plates. Foreign pas senger cars numbered 11,537. Mo torcycles nunjbered 528, light trucks 3775, trucks of one and- one-half tons or more capacity 2790 and horse-drawn vehicles 1988. Passenger automobiles bearing Oregon licenses comprised 64.20 per cent of the entire traffic. lp caotxi LIVE IL FOR GENUINE SALAD DRESSINGS To Improve the Flavor of Baked Halibut. When baking halibut, pour milk over and around the fish before set ting it into the oven. The milk im proves the flavor and makes the fish brown more quickly. THE HOUSEWIFE MRS. EMMONS EN ROUTE One of the Player Pianos offered in the World's Largest Factory Clearance Sale sj Jj; j2L. $15 Cash $10 Monthly Buys This Former $675 Quality Upright Pianos Cnew) $295. $395. $487. etc.. $10 Cash. Sfi to $10 Mnnlhlv Upright Pianos (used) $75, $145, $265, etc., $10 Cash, $3 to $5 Monthly Player Pianos (used) $295, $395, $493, etc, $15 Cash, $8, $10 Monthly Parlor Organs (used), $18, $25, $36. etc $5 Cash. $2 and $3 Monthly Phonographs' (used) $20, $35, $75, etc, $5 Cash, $2 and $3 Monthly 101-103 Tenth St. and Stark St. at Washington. Schwan Piano Co. Portland's Largest Pis no Distributors GIRL HAD PAINFUL TIMES Mothers Read This Letter and Statement Which Follows Portland. Indiana. "I was troubled with irregularity and constipation and would oiten nave V -i 4 f k i -. I I'' . i 1 TOURIST TRAFFIC HEAVY Foreign Autos on Oregon Roads One Day Total 11,537. SALEM, Or., Sept. 13. (Special.) Statistics prepared by the state highway department covering the operation of vehicles in Oregon dur ing the period 6 A. M. to 10 P. M., Thursday, August 17, showed that 20.03 per cent of the passenger cars passing given points on that date carried foreign licenses. A total of 57,598 vehicles were ob served by the division engineers on duty during the hours covered in the report. Of the total number of vehicles observed, 36,971 were pas senger automobiles equipped with i Reputed Burglar and Auto Thief Will Face Indictments. EUGENE, Or., Sept. 13. (Spe cial.) Mrs. Estol Katheryn Em mons, arrested at Los Angeles a month ago on a charge of burglary, alleged to have been committed in Eugene and Cottage Grove two years ago next November, and w'th complicity of the theft of a number of automobiles, will be brought to Eugene and is now on the way. A hard fight was made by Mrs. Emmons' attorneys in Los Angeles to prevent her extradition. Phone your want ads 'to The Ore gonian. All its readers are inter ested in the classified columns. to he down be cause of pains. One Sunday my aunt was visiting us and she said her girls tools Lydia E. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound and got well, so mother said she guessed she would let me trvit It is doing me good and I praise it highly. You are welcome to use this letter as a testimonial." Stella Newton, R. R. 8, Portland, Indiana. Mothers You should carefully guard your daughter's health. Advise her lof the daneer which comes from standing around with cold or wet feet. from lifting heavy articles, or over working. Do not let her overstudy. If she complains or neaaacne.pama in back or lower limbs, qr if you no-i tice a slowness of thought, nervous ness or irritability on the part of your daughter, give her careful attention. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is an excellent medicine for your daughter to take, a9 it 13 especially adapted to relieve just such symptoms. Remember it contains nothing that can injure her. 7 feM. t Tt- " llllosir Makes Stoves Shine has occasional interruptions or .unforseen delay on b&k lag days, but the house wife who uses Crescent Baking' Powder will not worry. She will .haVe lieht, melt in-your-mouth biscuits, mu fiins, and, cake because' Crescent combines the two leavening units that insure good results under. variable circumstances. From any grocer Crescent Manufacturing Company Seattle, Washington Orescent Baking Powder I" Beauty Contented yS. Tou are always confident 6V that your beauty has been Y. ' J developed to the highest A'. of its possibilities after ' IT using Couraud's Oriental t-v "sj Cream. JL i 'A . Send 15c. for Trial Size E r. Hipkb sts. J.yl I L . . mwv m. ,. Snow Flakes are as dainty as the blue and white clad girl s who packs them. Won't ask for crackers, say- ( . '- Pacific Coast Biscuit Co. II ' - , n DELIGHTFUL HAIR WASH Black Silk Stove Polish If tfMfwvnt. Luts tour time u Ion mm wrl'nary iah and sires your mwrm m onuianc, ink nmsa. ill not rah oil or dust ottmskm Jour tovaa look hkm new. Mad by m pvefsl prooeM of th tifjrttest rrmda via- teiiaJa. Economical too osed lea of Urn and does not wut, Will not aattle and caka in tha can tha last drop works lika the flrat. Made in pasta and liquid! turns) nn.)itv. anm rasa its. Just try It ont) east will coorwee 70a. Order from roar dealer today. (Tie Black Silk Air-Drying; Iran ftTnamal ca atm. reiriiters, store-pip-. prevents raittne;, ia Mack Bilk Mat I Poll for silver, airkal or brass. It mss ao equal lor use oa sajumbooUss. BLACK SILK STOVE POLISH WORKS TIRLINfi ILLINOIS 4 m As! FOR CONSTIPATION BILIOUSNESS Headache INDIGESTION Stomach Trouble SOLD EVERYWHERE- Tou can enjoy a delightful sham poo with very little effort and for a very trifling cost. If you get from your drugglm's a package of can throx and dissolve & teaspoonful In a cup of hot water. This makes a full cup of shampoo liquid, enouab so it ia easy to apply It to all the hair instead of JuKt the top of the head. Your shampoo Is now ready. Just pour a llttlo at a time on the scalp and hair until both are en tirely covered by the daintily per fumed preparation that thoroughly di8olves and removes every bit of dandruff, excess oil and dirt. After rinsing the hair dries quickly with a flufflnexs that make It aeem heavier than It im, and takes on a rich luster and a softness that makes arranging It a pleasure. dv. Safe Mitt For Infant & Invalid aaaa t 'rtwPt iafP NO COOKIMQ The "Food-Drink" for All Ages. Quick Lunch at Home, Office and Fountains. Ask or HOR' LICK'S. Avoid Imitations and Substitutes. POMPEIAM OLIVE OIL Sold Everywhere leaeaeieseceeesessaeBesef ! sllrlf with tsnachptH ...... r -' Pimento Cheeso aaseseaasssesaaesel