THE OREGON -DAILY JOURNAL. PORTLAND, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, 1919.
LATEST SOCIETY NEWS A FEATURE OF THE SUNDAY JOURNAL
. i Club CalRoar
. i: ThBjruda. May fj ...
Officers and presidents of affiliated organisations In Room A.
Central library, at 3 p. m. to appoint standing committees of Portland
Federation of Women's Organizations.
Peninsula Fark Lavender club birthday luncheon at the clubhouse
Social (EaUn&ar
Taarsday, May M
Multnomah Amateur Athletic club formal at clubhouse.
Laurelhurst dub dance at Christensen's hall.
& Slbmeri Clubs ahb octetp
Multnomah Ball
Thursday to
Be Gay
Brilliant Function is Planned for
Final Social Event of
Club.
By "Helen H. HnU-hlsoa
pXTENSIVB plana have been made for
a brilliant function at Multnomah
Amateur Athletic club on Thursday eve
ning, the occasion being the last formal
ball of the club for the reason. For a
number of weeks a general committee
nomposed of Paul Dickinson. Taylor C.
"White. Harry Fischer. Ted Holmes and
Alex. J. Jaenlcke has been working for
the success of the evening1. Many of
the members of the club have' returned
from service and the large social func
tions given this season have assumed
S) particular significance In the renewal
f old acquaintances and the greeting of
Old friends who have not been 'present
at these dances for many months.
J It is expected that this formal
will-be one pf the largest and most elab
orate affairs given during the entire
year. The February formal was at
tended by more than 200 couples and
was a. delightful occasion. , Club mem
bers are' permitted to bring friends and
tn accordance with theuisual custom of
the club no flowers are worn by the
women guests. ' .
j .
J Miss Ruth Ghirardelli has chosen June
4' as the date -pf "her wedding to Percy
Xee Menefee of this city. The wedding
will be solemnized at the home of the
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Domingo
Ghirardelli on Pacific avenue. San Fran-
- Cisco. Mrs. Varnel D. C Beach, sister
Of the bridegroom, will be matron of
honor and Mr.. Beach will be best man.
Miss Margery Lew In, Mrs. James Dunn
and Miss Esperence Ghirardelli will be
.the other, bridal attendants. Mr. and
Mrs. I B. Menefee. who are now in Cor
onado will motor up to San Francisco
for the wedding.
I ...
I The ' Knights of Columbus will enter
tain the enlisted men with a complimen
tary dancing party at the K. of C. build
ing, Vancouver barracks.' this evening.
Jjadles desiring to attend must have
Cards of admission, which are obtainable
At the Knights of Columbus club, Park
and Taylor streets,
j ...
j Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Dixon were hosts
for an Informal dinner party at their
borne in Eugene recently, honoring Mr.
and Mrs. Phlmister Proctor and Presl
dent and Mrs. P. I. Campbell. Mr, and
Mrs. George T. Gerlinger and J. N. Teal
were also week end guests at the Dixon
lame. &
1. . .
Mrs. J. W. Fowler will be hostess for
house party over the week end which
Includes Decoration Day. The party will
go to the camp of the Eastern & West
ern Logging company on the lower Co
rumbia river and the party will Include
eight young1 people, friends of Miss
Florence Fowler,
j ...
Lieutenant Colonel "William ElHs ar
rived in the city from service overseas
n Sunday evening. After a short leave,
fe-hlch he will spend witli his family in
Portland, he expects to go to Camp
Funston where he will be joined by his
Iamily later in the season.
... ... .
Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Sommers were
losts .for an Informal dinner party at
their home on Portland Heights on Tues
day evening. Their guests Included Mrs.
-Fielding Kelly. Mrs. Edith Knight
liolmes and Joseph A. Hill.
Mrs. James Thompson of 818 Marshall
fetreet will entertain on June 6 for her
Mece, Miss Helen Itlidge. Dancing will
be the diversion of the evening and a
irroup of the younger dancing set have
leen asked as guests for the occasion.
...
1 Mark McGary was host for a theatre
party at the Orpheum on Monday eve-'
ping,. followed by supper at one of the
.downtown "frills. The. party Included
XiOralne Dee, Doris Henningsen, Eliza
beth Wiggins, Bruce wells and Rudloph
jpalitzsch.
( Miss Elisabeth Talmadge of Athens,
IDa., who Is the guest of Mrs. John A.
Sweating for a few weeks, was honored
iat an informal theatre party on Monday
kfternoon.
...
1 Dr. and Mrs. Edward Hlrstel and
small sen. Bobble, left Mondaay for Cal
ifornia for a short visit with Mrs. Hir
tel's mother, Mrs. Sarah Jacobs, in San
.Francisco.
1 ....
r Betsy Ross tent-No. 1, Daughters of
kUnion Veterans of the Civil War, will
aneet Thursday at o'clock in room 525
courthouse for a short business session.
(This will be followed by a program and
iocia.l hour. All union veterans and fam
ilies are invited to be present. Mrs.
WOMEN ARE CARELESS
This has been proved over and over
gain during the war. They over
estimate their physical strength and
overtax It. Their ambition is commend
able, but does not compensate for the
hours nd days of misery which they
suffer .from symptoms caused by fe
male Ills brought on by overwork.
Women . who are weak, nervous, des
pondent, with headaches, backache and
d ragging-down pains should remember
there Is one tried and true remedy, that
is Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, now recognized every whre as the
standard remedy for such ailments.
(Adv.)
Small Pta
Small Dot
Small Pric
For Constipation
Carter's little
Liver Pills
will set you right
overnight.
Purely Vegetable
1 - 1
f AURA VOLSTEAD, daughter of Representative Volstead
M of Minnesota. Miss Volstead is a graduate of Ueorge
Washington law school and acts as her father s campaign
manager and takes an interest in problems of reconstruction.
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Mary M. Orewilor, Miss Eunice Paisley
and Mrs. Cora Mc Bride are the com
mittee. The ' daughters are taking an
acUve part in the united auxiliaries' re
ception committee in receiving return
ing service men and in the Salvation
Army drive and will serve as ushers at
The Auditorium on Memorial day at
the G. A. R. exercises.
....
Announcement has been made in Port
land of the marriage of Miss Marjorie
Webster Pierson to Wilson Gordon Wing
by Dr. and Mrs. Henry Goodwin Web
ster, brother and sister-in-law of the
bride. The ceremony was solemnized in
New York. May. 10.- After the middle of
June Mr. and Mrs. -Wing will make their
home In Providence, R. I. Mrs. Wing
is known in Portland, having visited
here a number of times with her sis
ter, Mrs. W. Harrison Corbett, who
wept East to attend the wedding. The
bride is also a sister, of Mrs. Henry R.
Failing of this city.
...
Members of Gamma Phi Beta sorority
at Eugene complimented their house
mother, Mrs. Hamilton "Weir, who left
Thursday for her summer home near
Portland, with a delightful dinner party,
Wednesday evening. A lovely basket
of yellow roses centered the table for
the occasion and dainty colonial nose
gays were the favors which marked
each place. Following the dinner Mrs,
Arthur Faguey Cote entertained the
guests with an informal program of
vocal selections.
. .
Invitations have been sent out for the
wedding of Miss Gertrude Victoria Kent
to Willis Everett Mack which will be
solemnized in the First Methodist Episco
pal church on the evening of May 28
at 8 o clock. The ceremony will be fol
lowed by an Informal reception at the
home of the bride's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fred "W. Kent, 493 East Thirty
fifth street.
. .
Mrs. D. A. Bailey, president of the
my
His Friends Help
AND there sat poor Cousin Bruin, with
that round basket on his head,
down over his eyes so that he couldn't
see a wink, and he felt very low in his
mind.
The Blue Jays, those blue coated
policemen of the Great Forest, flew all
around and scolded every minute and
finally set off to find that wicked
woman, the cause of all poor Cousin
Bruin's trouble. "And a good thing,
too, it is to have them gone," said
Jimmy Coon, "for they make such a
fuss. You can't make your self think,
even if they are the police of the
Woods, they always arrest the wrong
people."
"Now," said Teddy Possum, who
seemed to manage the whole thing, "this
is the plan, I have been thinking out
First . of all. I will tie my long tail
around that basket, and then when I
begin to pull. Chatterbox, you and Jimmy
Coon gnaw with your sharp teeth ' the
splints of the basket. Work hard and
Cousin Bruin will pull hard. Now, all
together, one.' two, three, go," and
Teddy Possum pulled so hard that he
fell over backwards. '
Chatterbox scolded and scolded and
he bit and chewed with his sharp little
white teeth. Jimmy Coon' worked like a
Beaver ; Cousin Bruin tugged - and
pulled, with all - his: might, and he
growled, too, for the sharp splints ran
into his face, but at last.-off came the
basket or what there was left of it, and
all those poor animals fell on the ground
just , worn out. And -. i Cousin ; Bruin's
face -was "bleeding from the splints of
the basket and so Jimmy Coon ran and
got a pawful of black' mud and tied
right on that cut -' place on Cousin
Bruin's face with a piece of long grass.
- And old Jim Crow sitting on the top
rail of the fence, cried out, "Caw, Caw,
what a lot of stupids you all are ; I
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Sons and Daughters of the Indian War
Veterans, has called a special meeting
Saturday. May 24, at 2 o'clock, in the
Central library to make arrangements
for the committees for the annual Ban
quet to be held in June. At the annual
meeting on Saturday May 17, the fol
lowing officers., were elected : Presi
dent, Mrs. Matthew Steele; vice presl
dent, Mrs. Charles Martyn"; second vice
president, Mrs. Rose ; Young : secretary,
Hosea Wood? treasurer, Mrs. Minnie
McGregor. ' "
....
Dr. D." R. (Dick) Ross arrived in
Portland from service overseas with
the 91st xll vision. Dr. Ross will resume
his work as a member of the staff of
the state hospital for the insane at Sa
lem. He is a nephew of Mrs. E. R.
Stocklem of this city.
. . -j
Mrs. H. B. Van Duser has asked a
number of friends in for "the tea hours
on Thursday in honor of Mrs. Jackson
Myers, who is in Portland from Hono
lulu, the guest of Mrs. John Gill.
. . .
Messages of congratulation and flow
ers are- being showered upon Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Emory on, the arrival of
a son born .Tuesday morning. The baby
and his mother are at the Portland
Woman's hospital on north Eighteenth
street.
. .
Miss Frances Cornell will be hostess
for an informal party at Alexandria
Court on Saturday evening. A number
of the younger set have been included on
the giiest list for the evening.
....
Miss Elizabeth Sfrowbridge will be
hostess for a' smart dancing party on
the evening of May 31. Miss Strow
bridge is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph A. Strowbridge.
...
Lincoln Garfield Relief corps will hold
an all-day sewing meeting Friday. May
23, at the courthouse. A large attend
ance Is desired. -
uoon
"Now. all together-one," two, three!"
cquf d have pulled Cousin Bruin out in
half the time!"., ' "
"Well, why In thunder didn't , you say
so before, and -save us all' that work
and- trouble?" snapped Jimmy Coon.
"You . always say that when, the work
Is all done, and I have never heard that
you did anything but say. Caw, Caw,
and I am just sick of your boasting.':
"Come, come," said Teddy Possum,
"we've had enough trouble for .one day.
That woman ; we must catch , and eat.
She is. the vvery one who has given ; us
all this trouble.' . You 'watch us catch
her."-. "Caw, Caw," called old Jim Crow.
"I'll watch all right, but you'll never
catch her !" . " . . .-
"Well, then ;we'II catch" you and eat
you alive for supper," snapped - Jimmjr
Tomorrow The Bathers Escaped ,
-Si
1
May Busy Time
In Women's
Clubs
Mafly Associations Conducted
War Work and Educational
Features in Last Months.
By Yella "Wlnser
"""HIS is the season of annual meetings
with reports of the year's work and
the , election of officers In the various
Parent-Teacher associations, May being
Parent-Teacher associations .May being
the election month for all of them. The
reports of all associations show a large
amount of valuable work done, both
In home social service, educational and
war -work. Many of the organizations
have converted their associations into
Red Cross units which have shared the
time and attention of the regular pro
gram. Mrs. J. Sherman Taylor," who has so
ably - Jieaded the Hoi man association,
has been reelected president. The other
officers are: Vice president, Mrs. R.
S. De Armond ; secretary." Mrs. Jilson ;
treasurer, Mrs. Charles Hursch.
Mrs. Fred M. Peters is the new presi
dent of the Woodmere association. The
other officers are: Vice president, Mrs.
E. E. Stdner ; secretary, Mrs. E. C.
Griffith: treasurer. Mrs. C. M. Clark.
Mrs. D. B. Kelly was again chosen to
head the Woodstock association, which
had such a successful year under her
leadership.- An effort will be made dur
ing the coming year to interest the 'men
of the community to a greater extent
than before and to that end A. M. Stan
ton has been made first vice president.
Other officers are: Second vice presi
dent. Miss Carrie McCade ; secretary,
Mrs. J. M. Rice : treasurer, Mrs. A. M.
Stanton ; auditor. A. J. Perdeaux.
Mrs. P. E. Alger was the choice of the
Clinton Kelly association, which she
presided over during the past year! The
other officers chosen are : First vice
president, Mrs. Segil Grutze ; second vice
president, Mrs. L. A. Read ; secretary,
airs, lorn bweeney ; treasurer. Mrs.
Koy unrntn.
The annual luncheon of the College
club of Corvallls on the campus last Sat
urday proved a charming affair for 150
women attending. The rooms of the "Y"
hut were beautified and made pleasant
to receive the guests, and Mrs. Prentiss
...w 1U OKI V t ue- I
lettable luncheon. Singing of folk songs.'
" aw t . viuuii- ctnu Airs.
H. W. Harglss. and toasts brilliant and
humorous were offered by Mrs. J. F.
Brumbaugh on "The College Club," Miss
Miss Schnelle on "Paris," Mrs. A. B.
Cordley on "Domesticated Deans," Miss
Helen GUkey on "Conservation of Wild
Flowers, . Mrs. W. A. Jensen on "Why
Women Are So." and Miss Kol! on "Un
married Professors." the latter respond
ing tn clever verse. Dean Mary E. Faw
cett, speaking for the club, voiced .appre
ciation of the friendly services of Dr.
and Mrs. D. .V. Poling in the interests
of the club. She also called for a vote
of thanks to. the retiring president, Mrs.
Brumbaugh. The new club officers were
announced by Mrs.-Ida B. Callahan and
are Miss Lucy Lewis, president ; Mrs.
H. . F. Barrows, secretary ; Mrs. C. E.
Newton, treasurer. .
...
About 73 members and guests of the
Eugene Fortnightly club gathered in the
parlors of the Osbum hnti SahiMav
worn la1 hir -.. e, it - . r
afternoon for their last social meeting
until falL Mrs. Minnie Washburne,
president of the club, presided. Mrs.
Mabel Holmes Parsons read two original
plays. "Moonbeams'" and "Vrrfr iViii-
dren," accompanied on the piano by Miss
Kutn Javts. The guests then adjourned
to the palm room where ices and cakes
were served at tables prettily decorated
with lupin and bachelor buttons.
....
The annual ladies' night for the wives
of the members of the Round Table of
Eugene was observed Tuesday of last
week when the men and their guests
Liebes Furs
Furs of wonderful beauty and individuality
that add piquancy to the Summer costume.
Exclusive models, fresh from our own shops.
Chokers and Cravats
of Stone-Marten, Chinchilla Squirrel,
Kolinsky, Sable, Mink, Australian
Opossum, Hudson Seal, Mole
Summer
Storage
Absolute Security
for Furs. Oriental
Rugs -and valuable
Garments in Liebes
Fur Vaults. Tem
perature main
tained at 20 de
grees below freez
ing. Phone Mar
shall 785, A-614L
&iahIishedJ864
AS3P0a t
itiae ungual f
Noumhinc
Pig tibial
No Cooking
gocInanta,In-rafldi andOrowing Children. I
The Original Food-Drink For AH Aga&I
MEW YORK. It looKs as though he
' public were given a chance to - use
two waistlines. Evidently, the Inde
cision on .the part of women . to know
where their waistline should be, led
to this generosity on the part of the
designers.
It was Cheruit of Paris who ac
centuated the hip-line and the waist
line on one gown. When the gowns
from the establishment first came Into
the American trade, women decided to
take off one of the two or three belts,
and merely because woman is incon
sistent. The designers gave her every chance
to produce as many lines around her
waist as she wanted, so that- no one
would be final and assert authority :
but when she got the chance, she made
up her mind to use only one.
BOTH LINES TODAY
This season the public, aided by the
designers, have accentuated two lines
around the middle of the body. If
thy Put a sash at the hips, they do
something to indicate that nature de
parts from the straight line higher up,
No woman today makes a pretense
of having a small waist, but she seems
to have a troubled desire to show
that she realizes the formation of er
anatomy. Therefore, she places a little
string of ribbon, velvet or metallic tissue,
around the spot where the waist has
been from the beginning of civilization.
It's an odd little tribute to nature.
It has something in it of a woodman's
trick of placing a bit of white cloth
on a tree to mark the path.
Now. if -the hips are , marked by a
thin ribbon or band, then a wide sash
goes up to the waistline, but whichever
way you turn it, you are apt to get
two definite lines around a woman's
figure between bust and knees.
Even the curaiss blouse and the tight
jersey have these lines, and each gown
of the new sort shows in some particu
lar way that women must be right, one
way or the other. In subscribing to the
fashion for a normal or a long waist. .
APRON AT THE HIPS
Take the gown which is sketched
It worn in a new play and has at
tracted unusual attention.
Here you see the two lines around
the middle of the body, the one at
the hips marked out in a peculiar way.
It is the start for a pleated apron. .'
These aprons have suddenly jumped
into fashion. They are one of the many
ways of giving width to a slim under
skirt, for it is quite evident that none
of the fashions will permit us to wear
a tight skirt .without Bome covering of
sizable dimensions.
This gown is of beige taffeta, with
a pleated apron of beige tulle which
drops in a point at the front and stands
gathered at the Osburn hotel for a ban
quet and program following-. .. Dr. E. S.
Conklin, professor of psychology at the
University, read a.aper n' The Trail
of the Ghosthunter. The" banquet "tables
in the palm room were prettily decor
ated witli purple Iris. Er O. Immel, pres
ident of the round-table, welcomed the
ladies, and Mrs. William MoM Case made
the response. Miss Eleanor Lee sang in
her usual charming manfier, accom
panied by John Stark Evans at the
piano. About 75 people were present, in
cluding the men and their wives.
Mrs. J. B. Montgomery, Mrs. Isaac Lee
Patterson and Mrs. J. A. Keating, are
spending the day In McMinnvllle. guests
of Mrs. E. M. Patterson, the organising
regent of the new chapter of Daughters
of American Revolution there.
. .
Willard W. C. T. U. will meet Friday
at 2 p. m. with" Mrs. J. H. Andersen,
409 Jessup street. There will be a
speaker and all members and friends
will be welcome. ,
Wire guards to be slipped over babies
feeding bottles to- prevent them being
broken have been invented by a New
York man.
Furs Re-styled
The charm
of summer
days is in
RichMHk, Malted Grain Extract In Powder
OTHZItS
i sbp bbsss- m - -
Irma
IMITATTOri3
to
w
Street frock of biscuit-colored taffeta,
with pleated apron of tulle in the
same shade.
out at the hips like wide panniers. There
Is a cord at the ' top of the apron to
mark the hip-line, and at the waist there
Is a big sash of the beige taffeta over
which the blouse sags, in the approved
manner. .
The rest. of the bodice is negligible.
Most of the new bodices are. : No col
lar, no sleeves; just an unshirt idea.
Mary Garden Sued
By Her Dressmaker
New York, May 2L (L N. a) Mary
Garden bought earrings .that cost $7.50
and three rings at $5 each, along with
wearing apparel totalling $2700, accord
ing to a firm of dressmakers which is
suing the prima donna for that sum,
alleging that Mary forgot to pay. A
pink underslip and turquoise blue and
mauve robe with head, dress was listed
at $691, a boy's costume of red broad
cloth was 9221 and a white Grecian
gown with head dress at $263. '
Two Missouri Inventors have patented
a harvester that has but 125 eastings,
one chain and a single operating lever.
I SSI
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USUI
i
PS
Actress Proves
Surprise in
New Role
Mae Murray, Usually Drawing
Room Queen, Plays Part of
Simple Mountain Girl.
fHE public associates winsome Mae
. Murray, former star of Zlegfeld's Fol
lies, with Dame Fashion's latest cre
ations and an environment of Bohe
mia's gilded cafes or society a finest
drawing rooms; But Mae proves a sur
prise in "What Am I Bid ?,'" . her new
film special, which opened this afternoon
at the Strand. She plays a simple,' Il
literate mountain girl, clad in tatters.
This photoplay of the great outdoors.
with Its background of primeval . for
ests and peopled by creatures swayed
by primitive passions, is an unusually
powerful picture. Its story grips. It
appeals to the sympathy of audiences.
It Is- full of tense situations , and has
a few that come under the title of the
spectacular.
Bob and Dorothy Finley, clever en
tertainers who scored a hit last season,
are back again in a new repertoire of
song and comedy gems. ,
The Terpschore Duo offer a splendid
dancing novelty. White and Knight are
a pair- of excellent vocalists and instru
mentalists, while Barnes and i Lorraire.
a -youthful pair, make 'em laugh with
their comedy stuff put over by a skit,
"Romanuig a La Handcarr." :
Piedmont
is cold pressed from whole,
Laml-picked peanuts grown in tho
"sunny south. ;
It i s a wholesome and easily
'digested American " food oil ideal
for both table and cooking purposes.
Aek for PIEDMONT .
The food
the nut
Toasted
Here's a dish that Snow Flakes
are particularly adapted to. Spread
grated cheese on each Snow Flake
Soda, toast in a quick oven. The,
result is an ; appetizing, satisfying
lunclv You should try . this.
Dont ask for crackers, say Snow
Flakes. : :
Your grocer can supply you; ;
i&7, ...
Oardei
BY SHE OA CH-1LDS HARO&CAVE3
(OP PORTLAND )
. Such ... plants as tomatoes, peppers.
muskmelons, cucumbers and other vine
crops may be guarded from disease and
Insects by spraying three or four times
at intervals of two weeks with Bordeaux
mixture. In this way the vines are pro
tected until they have made vigorous
growth and so they withstand any Liter
attacks.
Portland rones are In season. If 'the.
roses are cut carefully each morning
the "bloomlnff season will bo prolonj;el.
Fading roses and forming; seed pods
check the bloom' and give the garden a
ragged, untidy appearance. Keep the
bushes in shape by giving them a little
attenUon-. dally,
- . ' .
When thinning the lettuce, set out a
few plants in a moist, shady . place ; it
is an easy matter, to keep a supply of
head lettuce through the early summer.
Iceberg or California Cream Butter are
good varieties for late planting.
.' ; '-
Pick the blooms and berries from the
Rtrawberry plants that were set this
season. The plants need the strength
for making growth In order that there
may be a full crop next season.
Grass and 'weeds take a new lease
on life after a rain; thorough weeding
and cultivation are necessary as soon
as the ground is dry enough to work,
if the garden Is to be kept clean.
. rruvnvfs nvi t mw wit
to secure a satin skin. Apply Satin Skin
Cream, then Satin Skin Powder. Adv.
Peanut, Oil
oil with
flavor
Cheese
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