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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1922)
13 THE MORNING OREG ONI AN, WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 8, 1923 A LARGE farewell reception will be given this afternoon at the Vancouver barracks for General and Mrs. Richard M. Blatch ford by Colonel T. M. Anderson and the seventh infantry. A large num ber of Portland society folk will motor over to tne barracks for this occasion. No formal invitations were issued, but a general invita tion has been extended to the Blatchfords' many friends. In compliment to Miss Eva Rich mond, who is to leave next week for New York city to study voice, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Crosby of Rose City Park entertained the seven young women with a dinner party Monday night. The guests included Misses Eva Richmond, Ariel Mc Queen, Audrey Logan, Ruth Ag new, Leita Hayes, Frances gurst and Mrs. Marie Wadsworth. A smart bridge luncheon was given Monday afternoon at the Waverley Country club when Mrs. Frederick E. Judd and Mrs. W. L. Thompson entertained. Miss Dorothy Metschan and Miss Georgiana Mears, popular bride elects will be the inspirations for a tea at which Miss Janet House will entertain Saturday, Novem ber 18. Mrs. Gordon Voorhies and her daughter, Miss Marion Voorhies of Medford, are in town for the, horse show. After having spent several weeks in Medford, Mrs. Margaret Burrell Biddle and Miss Margaret Biddle have returned to Portland. They passed last week end in Eugene. This afternoon the Portland Art association will give a tea at the ' art museum from 4 o'clock until 5:30 o'clock to welcome the new members. The work of the Ore gon sculptors and painters will he on exhibition. In the afternoon Judge Charles H. Carey will give an address. Mrs. Harold Simon Gilbert will be hostess at a tea Friday after noon, November 17, for Mrs. Frank Newton Gilbert, from 3 until 6 o'clock. A marYiage of muc-h interest is that of Miss Blanche ' Roark and Frank M. Demorest. The wedding took place Sunday noon at the Di vine Science church, the ceremony being performed by Rev. Thaddeus Minard. Mrs. Demorest, as manager of the Woman's exchange, is well known and very popular. The bride groom is a Portland business man. m Last night Mr. and Mrs. Natt si y 25.- - i itr-$ l - 2 It h I iX- ' Alarkham Photo. MRS. E. E. CABLE, AVHO'lS OJV THE COMMITTEE TO RAISE A FUND FOB THE NEW IRVIJiGTON CLUBHOUSE. McDougall entertained with a box party at the horse show. Their guests were Mr. and Mrs. Emery Olmstead, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Spencer, Mrs. Alexander R. Lund gren and Walter Ringsred. Tonight Judge and Mrs. Charles H. Carey will entertain Mr. and Mrs. A. " Phimister Proctor, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph N. Teal, at dinner. 1 Arrangements have been com pleted for the entertainment to be given by Washington Commandery No. 15, Thursday night in the lodge room. Mr3. E. L. Knight, with her Ladies' Columbia Concert orchestra, will furnish an interesting aiyl varied programme. This is one of the last appearances of the orches tra before joining the Orpheum circuit. Mrs. Charles Albert (Sara Truax), formerly with Otis Skinner, now conducting a dramatic school at Spokane, is in Portland with her daughter Dricilla, who isriding at the horse show. They are stopping at the Mallory. TfimYouULove to Make ' An Interesting Girdle, Chic and Easy to Make. YOU will find the girdle shown both easy to make and extreme ly smart looking on a serge or poiret twill frock. Fit a belt of silk around your frock. Join loops of heavy wool to its lower edge. Make a long braid, using several pieces of the wool for each strand of the braid. Leave unbraided ends eight inches long. Tie a knot at the top of these ends, which form the tassel. Join the braid to the belt with a loop of wool. This girdle can be made separately and worn with dif-ferent-frocks. FLORA. serve with almost aflj kind of meat and good brown gravy. Spanish beans, No. 1- Soak red Mexican beans over night and par boil in salted water until easily pierced, but not broken or mushy. Drain and add to one quart cooked beans one can tomatoes, one. finely chopped onion, oie clove garlic (may be omitted if garlic is dis liked), three or four tablespoons salad oil or bacon fat, one teaspoon mustard, one or two teaspoons sugar, one tablespoon vinegar with salt and Spanish pepper to taste. Mix all together and cook in a bean pot or fireproof baking dish until the beans are very tender and thoroughly soaked in the tomato dressing. Add cayenne or tabasco if a very hot dish is liked. Some makers add a few grains each of powdered cloves and mace with the Spanish pepper. Serve the beans in their own sauce, plain or boiled rice or with chile con carne. Another way of making the sauce in which the beans are cooked is to add some rich brown meat stock to the tomatoes and other ingredients and boil the mixture down a good deal before adding it to the par boiled beans. There are several other methods of serving and the sauce may be varied almost indefinitely in flavor, color and pepperiness. HorioldPiDliow bq Lilian Tinqlo PORTLAND, Oct. 19. Dear Miss Tingle: Will you please publish different recipes for Btuffed peppers; alo for beans, Mexi can style? Many thanks. L. P. IF to be used as a "main dish," the stuffing should consist chiefly (though not entirely) of chopped meat or flaked fish, or grated cheese, or eggs In some form, com bined with "flavor materials" and "binding materials," euch as crumbs or sauces, with or without a little starchy material, such as rice or po tato. But if they are to be used as "meat accompan'ments" then the main Ingredient in th stuffing will "be neutral-flavored jnaterial," such as crumbs, or rice, or corn, or maca roni, or potatoes, with some piquant flavor material and perhaps a small quantity of ham or bacon, onion, to mato or grated cheese to give "char acter." Following is an example of the lat ter, or "meat accompaniment" type: Stuffed grpen peppers Select even-sized medium large peppers, either fresh or salted and freshened. Remove the stem and -scoop out the soft part of the inside. For each tomato allow about one-half slice bacon (or a similar amount of ham) finely chopped, a teaspoon of finely chopped onion, a teaspoon of finely chopped green pepper (or parsely or chopped celery leaf if liked), a tea r spoon of tomato catsup, a pinch of sugar and paprica pepper and salt to taste. Of course, no salt is need ed if salted peppers are used. A f?w grains of cayenne or a hint of Spanish pepper or curry powder may be liked. Cut the bacon or ham up very fine and try it out, adding a little butter, oil or fat if very lean ham is used; then fry the onion to a delicate golden brown. Then add the other flavoring materials with as much cold boiled rice, or corn, or hominy, or finely chopped cooked potatoes, or bread crumbs as will fill the peppers (piled up), moisten ing with .a little stock or milk if necessary. "taste plays a part here, since the materials vary. Occasionally ; little grated cheese is a good addi tion. Fill the hollow peppers with the mixture, piling high and cover ing the top with buttered crumbs or crumbs mixed wtih dry grated cheese. Then bake until the "pepper is well cooked and tender, basting with stock and melted butter and To Clean Marble. CLEAN your marble statuary in the following way: Mix two parts of common soda, one part of powdered pumice stone and one part of whitening. Sift them through a fine sieve. Then mix td a paste with water. Apply this paste with a piece of flannel and rub well. Wash it off with soap and water. This will make the marble look as bright as new. THE HOUSEWIFE. Pacific HQine-commg Due. PACIFIC UNIVERSITY, ' Forest Grove, Or., Nov. 7. (Special.) The associated students under the direc tion of Verel Stanley, student man ager, are preparing for the first annual home-coming November 17, when the Pacific Badgers will meet Willamette. The local chapters of the alumni throughout the state have called meetings of their mem bers and have signified their inten tion of making the affair a real get-together for the alumni of the northwest. Wiltemette university will run a special train to forest Grove that day. frowsts When You Sneeze J1 fjr. Think of Bovril "1 Ex Helen Decie . IN GOOD Literature mere are many examples of that considerate type of man whom our ancestors liked to classify as a "perfect gentleman." French history is rich in courtly chevaliers of the model of Bayard ana sst. Louis, the crusader-king, whose erreat name is hnma h nn of our largest American cities. in l'rench fiction perhaps Athos is the supreme gentleman. This la made evident in several ways, some of them rather "highfalutin"' for tnis generation. Still, at least one of the many COUrteOUS traits Of thp nramier musketeer might be adopted with profit by the busybodies, men and women, who have th imni.tinant habit of proffering unasked counsel on an occasions. "Athos never gave nis aavice Detore it was asked, and even them it mnat ho nav twice." Among those who, presum ably, are equals, gratuitous advice is gratuitous aiscourtesy. The Progressive. Woman's League will hold its regular business meet ing today at t P. M. in room H of central library. Alnsworth Parent-Teacher asso ciation will meet today at 2:30 o'clock In the assembly room of the school. "Reading for Children" will be the subject for the afternoon and Miss Jessie MillarU will be the principal speaker. All mothers and friends of the school are Invited to attend A meeting of the motion picture chairman of the Parent-Teacher circle will be held in room F of cen tral library today at 2:30 o'clock. The Parent-Teacher- association Is co-operating with the National Mo- 1H& Ounces forggJ i w jt L1H'1L FOR GENUINE SALAD DRESSINGS BAKING POWDER No better made regardless of price. MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT tion Picture league, through con structive work, in the interest of better educational and community films. . ' Sunnyside W. C. T. U. will meet Thursday at 2 P'. M. at the home of Mrs. Alice Hanson, 1110 East Salmon street. Mrs. M. L. T, Hidden will speak on "Christian Citizenship." Members are asked to bring thimbles. The annual meeting of Portland chapter, American Red- Cross, will be held this evening at 8 o'clock in the story hour room of central library. Combining all the pleasant fea tures of a big parish social occasion, the Women's guild of St. Andrew's Episcopal church, Portsmouth, Willi conduct a dinner and gift sale in the parish hall Friday evening. The dinner will be served from 6 to 8 o'clock and an'informal musical pro gramme will be presented. St. David's branch of the Woman's auxiliary will meet Thursday after noon at the .parish house at 2 o'clock. Mrs. Wilson Johnston, dio cesan president, will address the meeting and the following pro gramme will be presented: Roll call from "Echoes of the Conven tion," leader, Mrs. Muckle. i. "Programme Presented." "Rural Problem," Archdeacon Black. Music, solo, Mrs. Stone. Hostesses. Mesdames Blue, Burness, Boren, Bunson, Church. Thompson Parent-Teacher associ ation will meet tomorrow at 2:30 o'clock. A programme will be presented. Octet of Woodwinds Is Required in Symphony. Flntes, Oboes, Clarinets and Bas soons Essential.' BY P. E. N. Article No. 2, the Woodwinds. IN ADDITION to a quintet of strings, a symphony orchestra must have a full octets of wood winds, two flutes, two oboes, two clarinets and two bassoons. These eight instruments are indispensable to an orchestra which aspires to be a, "symphony" orchestra. Very fre quently, two other woodwinds, the piccolo and the English horn, are called for by composers of sympho nic music.- f The piccolo is hot illustrated in the accompanying group of wood winds because it so closely re sembles the flute. TheJ piccolo is half as long as the flute and sounds an octave higher. The voice of the piccolo is shrill and impish, that of the flute clear and birdlike, while the oboe's voice is more hu man. The English horn is the alto oboe, and its peculiarly rich and meloncholy tone-quality . is due in part to its globe-shaped lower end. One of the most famous passages for the English horn is in the "Largo" of Dvorak's "New World" symphony, which the Portland symphony or chestra will play November 15. - The mouthpieces of the oboe and English horn are formed by two narrow reeds. The mouthpiece of the clarinet is chisel-shaped and its lower end is bell-shaped. Its voice, eloquent and tender, has been called "the voice of heroic love." The bassoon supplies the bass for the woodwind choir of the orches tra nad may be easily recognized by the crook which projects from its side and which forms its mouth tij Madam belief OPEGON CITY, Oct. 3. Dear Madam Richet: I have a dark brown all-wool broaf cloth coat. The material is good as new, bat the style is not what they are wearing this year. ' Could I make it over into a wrap for winter? The back is in two pieces, t with the bottom section 33 inches wide at the bottom, gored slightly ajid gathered on the upper section at a high waist line, 13 Inches from neck. The fronts are 4o inciies .ong and 20 inches wide at bot tom. The armhole is 1I0 inches around and the shseve has a sewed-on cuff 5 inches long. There is a collar S1 inches wide and 24 inches long. There are two belts which cross in front, each about two inches -wide. The coat is lined throughout. I am 5' feet 4 inches tall, weigh 112 pounds. Have brown hair and blue eyes, no color- Am 26 years old. Thanking you in advance for any help you ii. ay give me, I am V. A. G. V. A. G., Oregon City, Or. May I suggest that you make your coat into a dress-coat following- the general style of the model shown in the .fall quarterly of the Eutterick, page 49, No. 3952, the skirt to be of black broadcloth? Now should you not wish to combine with an other material to such generous proportion then I would ask you to see the dress shown in the Elite for November, page 35, No. 4608, D. Have the under inset of fawn satin, also the vest and upper porticn of the sleeve. The buttons to be of the satin. The fitted in line at the back of your coat is quite all right but the straight better if in recutting you can gain the long line. With your coat's length it vill be neces sary to ha've an under band of the satin as well as the inset at front side. Tou might just as well wear Italian Silk Underwear costs less because it lasts so long VjHAT'S the use ot denying yourself the delightful luxury of silk underthings when you can wear Kayser Italian Silk Underwear the finest of all silks at less cost than other materials? Not for the same cost as other kinds, mind you, but actually for less. If you don't know that, it's for only one reason you've never j worn KAYSER. g Pure silk absolutely the best procurable such as Kayser uses, is the most durable fabric on earth. And when you wear silk under garments tailored to fit, reinforced where wear is greatest the won derful Kayser Marvelfit you are getting more wear, more comfort than you can out of any other kind. As for laundering just place it in the basin with a good soap, dry it, iron it, and there it is. "T&ofiaaSlLK MADE IN U.S.A. Unde C.11 3iati.an.CJ l tZ rwear Look for the starred label. One-star for medium weight. Three-star for heavy weight. AMLcuiSllK AOE IN U S A. It is in th wearing of the Kayser kalian Silk Vests that their superior quality and exquisite tailoring are given the truest test. Just three inches above the kne ""they do not wrinkle or roll up. :.50 and up Look for the Marvelfit reinforcement in the crotch of every pair of Kayser Italian Silk Bloomers it insures their durability. Stretches with every step, giving comfort and ease of movemenc Marvelfit reinforcement $3.50 and up Designed for comfort a Kayser Italian Silk Union Suit fulfils its purpose with "room enou gh" yet carefully fitting the figure. Look for the Alarveijit re inforcement. 6.00 and up Tn these days of clinging lines the Ksyser Italian Siik Sports Bloomers serve. double purpose by talcing the place of a petticoat end being comfortable besides. pt.v ana.-up PORTLAND, Oct. 3. Dear Madam Richet: I think planning a dress Is the hardest part, so am asking you to please do that part for me.' I have a suit like sample which I wculd like to make Into a one-piere dr??. The skirt has pix gores. 38 inches long; the front -g-ore is 10 inches "-t the bottom and 6 inches at the top: back 19 inches at bottom and 1- inches the top; side gores 14 inches at botto.n and inches- at top. The jark.t is 30 inches long, one-piece back and seams down the fronts. Would like to combine with some other material. I do not care for all black. I am 52 ears young, brown hair turn ing ts:ay; brown e;"es and plenty of color; height 5 feet 4 inches; bust :18 inches, waist -S viches and hips 40 inches; weight 135 pounds. Any help will be very much appreciated. Mra N. M. Mrs. K. M. For your black twil! I have found what to me seems a perfect model and now it is for you to decide whether or not you agree. The detailed line cannot be carried out, due to 'our front being: cut to the bottom of the jacket's edge, but 1 shall ask you to piece out the necessary portion which produces a shorter vest line. In material such as yours the seam wrill show but little, if at all, when well pressed. Your skirt can be cut down .ind new sleeves made from these "cut out." Combine your black with a rust shade of broadcloth, using the latter for the 'vest, collar, sdeeve facing and the skirt inset. You will not have sufficient material for the sash ends ai d so I would ask you to have the belt of tKe rust and black strips braided together, then the narrow ends at the side. No vember Klite, paee 35. No. 4504 D. AVERAGE WEEKLY TEMPERATURES OF LEADING CALIFORNIA Resorts for Week .Ending; Saturday. Nov. 2S, 1922: Max. Min. Mean. Max. Mln. Mean. Long Beach 77 53 65 Los Angeles 80 56 68 QNfBACH CAl nprwoT 2Ia&L Hart Eos S".iSrS;Sf jj Ritt Auto Bus Meets Ail Tiwssfy RATES EUROPEAN PLAN. Thirty rooms, single $1.50, double $2.00; 100 rooms, single $2.00, double $3.00; 250 rooms, with private toilets, single $L'.50 to $4.00, double $3.00 to $5.00; 400 rooms, with private bath, single $3.00 to $5.00. double $3.50 to $7.00. Twenty Corner Suites, with private baths, each one fur nished differently and luxuriously, satis fying the most discriminating taste: SIngI, $5.00 to $B.OO per day. ', Double, $7.00 to $8.00 per day Magnificent lobby and mezzanine floor. . m . . L&rce sample rooms. NO trip to California is com plete without a sojourn at the world - famed "House -of Hospitality." Situated at the breakers' edge-only 20 miles from Los Angeles. Year-round golf, tennis, bathing and fish ing, as well as motoring, horseback riding, sailing, dancing, etc. Privileges of the Virginia Country Club to guests. Forget the shortage of coal and the discomforts of winter, and enjoy life in "Sunny Cali fornia." Write for reservations and request folder. G. M. BURBANK, Manager. Phone your want ads to The Oregonian. All its readers are interested In the classified columns. We write them all Have you ever had a loss and when you went to collect the insurance found that that particular thing wasn't cov ered by your policy? Pacific States Fire Insurance Com pany policies can be written to cover air most any contingency. For instance, you can insure your store or factory against fire and also against loss of prof its caused by the fire. This is called "use and occupancy" insurance. We also write hail and automobile insurance. Whatever your particular insurance problem, this home company is equipped to give you maximum protection at min imum cot. Insurance in Pacific States carries with it, that comfortable knowl edge that "all is well." 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