4 THE OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, ..SUNDAY. MORNING, OCTOBER 17," 1C20. I Halloween Party ;OTBeGivynat : Laurelhuf stGlub , rrHIB Laurelhuret club women's pro s'! X gressive unit will give a Halloween ' and hard tlm party the evening of :: , October SO at the clubhouse, the affair '!"?"! to Include all club member The club jmembrrN will dance at the clubhouse ; Thursday evening- and the afternoon 'I ' ! card party for women members will be '? i held' Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Mrs, George O. Wentworth and Mrs. ' i Charles Irwin will be hostesses. The fortnightly card party was held ! at Ihe clubhouse Thursday evening- with ' -a large attendance. Dr. and Mrs. T. I Perkins were hosts. The high scores In bridge went to Mrs. W. P. Richard son and Mrs. James Forbes. In five , j hundred Mrs. R. C. Bradley and W. M. ..(tiRlce. The dancing classes were opened for ' j the season by A. C. Holmes, the In structor, Monday evening and a large crowd attended the opening class. "' ' The Study club met at the clubhouse : for Its opening; meeting of the season, i Monday afternoon, with a good attend- ' ance. ' j ''j I The Elite Dancing club was formed Si last week from the members of the ' Service circle drill team. Neighbors of r Woodcraft. The dub' will give a series 7 ; of dances through the winter. The first affair will be a Halloween dance to be J H given at the Armory October 27. The ,? i members of the club Include : M Us Eu- ;nlce Ross. Mrs. Anna Cox. Mra Amer '.' lea Tletgn. Miss Carrlee Crouner. Mrs. Denntson. Miss Linn, Miss Bessie Will ; gerodt, Mrs. Nsn Boyd, Mrs. May Camp 'bell, Mra WUllam IL McDarUel. Miss Leona Hay ward. Miss Blanch Stephens, ' - Mrs. James D. GUIllan. Patronesses for the first dance include : Mra C. C. Van ; Orsdall. Mrs. Anna Mardall, Mra Min nie Hlner, Mra. Nellie Starr, Mra. Min nie McGregor, Mrs. Gene Harney, Mra s Dona McDaniel, Mrs. Carrol Hlmtnet- earn. .' j Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Allen Densmore i are receiving congratulations on the ar ..r : rival of a daughter, born to them last 'y week. Mrs. Densmore will be remem bered as one of the soloists at the Church of Our Father (Unitarian). Members of Alpha Chi Omega alum inas met Saturday afternoon at the home of Mrs. MacDonald Mayne. The affair ;was planned as a surprise trousseau shower for Miss Alberta Cavender, whose ' marriage t.o Osbom B. Morrow will be . ! an 'event of early .November. Mr. and Mrs. Slgmund W. Ottenhelmer ' entertained with an informal dinner i party' Monday evening at the Hotel Portland. Covers were placed for 11 i guests. Portland friends have received cards wr-TTvar announcing, the marriage of Miss Ger- ' trude Tunstall and Stuart Oakes Blythe, which took place Saturday at the Brown .Memorial Presbyterian church, Balti- more. Following the ceremony a recep , tion was held at Alumnae lodge, which assembled a large company of friends and relatives of the bridal couple. The bride la daughter of Mr. and Mrs. v Warrick Rldgeley Edwards, and has : been associated with Mr. Blythe as art editor of the Country Gentleman, of which he Is associate editor. Mr. Blythe, who is the son of Samuel Q. Blythe, was a member of the staff of The Journal several years ago and has a wide circle of friends in Oregon. Mr. and : Mrs. Fremont O. Downing. - who make their home at the Hotel Portland, entertained Informally at din- ner Thursday evening, seven friends be ' lag' guests. i Astra circle No. 152, Neighbors, of Woodcraft, will give a card party ; 1 f r'V1rfv n X: S;K il 1 : i I ir ffmisWimes'iriWaB i 'it nui. . J. K. STERN LADIES' TAILOR . SPECIAL PRICK I IT .ADVANCED FALL SUITS i , ' D05T WAIT TILL LATER , ALDER ST. , 1 - JLXl M" RS JOHN RAYMOND ROBINSON (Gertrude Towne) I of Buffalo, N. Y., who is the bouse guest of Miss Madelle I a. .Lyon. Miss yon and Mrs. a. &treit entertain ea i II at a smart ta fsr Mra Rnhinsrm last wvW at the home of the II I latter. , ' I WW, I i ,' Va $ . Il I t;:- f ? v x : - I I ii I J - -jaaBiffiaakaB ' 'if Thursday evening, October 21. 1920. at their hall. Tenth and Taylor streets. There will be no admission charged, and the circle is offering a few attrac tice prizes. All neighbors and their friends invited. Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Schenck announce the 'birth of a son ' who arrived Thurs day. The baby wiU be named George. BEAUTY iS A SHRINE AT WHICH MOST EVERY WOMAN WORSHIPS and correct froomtnr; lend no small aid toward giving to' woman a beauty which is her Inherent right. This fact Is enthusiastically recognised in the Marinello Cosmetic Shop, where ex pert operators are at your service. Phone Marshall t3? for Aspolatsieat IM-4 BROADWAY BLDO. Fresh every, day. Morrison st. Bet. 4.. a " . 11 Z VJ-I CommunityGirls To Have Rally TuesdayEvening MISS HARRIET LEACH and Cor4M,1obr M: returning to Portland Natansen will appear on the pro-T on after tnat .a. gram of the community service rally to be held in the assembly room of the Multnomah hotel. Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. Charles F. Ber will be chairman of the evening, and Mayor Baker will address the young people. Miss Kathleen Cockburn will outliue the plans for the winter activities. All young men and women intertstel in community service and their friends are cordially Invited to te present- Ho ad mission will 'be charged. The regular weekly activities of Tm munity service will be as follows : Mon day, community service chorus, room A, Central library, 8 p. m. ; Tuesday, ath letics, gymnasium Washington high school, 7 :45 p. m. ; Thursday. American short story class, 438 Northwestern Bank building, 7:30; Friday, military drill and games, armory, 7 :45. All com munity service girls are welcome at the Y. W. C. A. wlmming pool every Wed-, nesday from 6 p. m. to 8 p. m. Girls are required to bring suits and towels. Miss Harriet Mardall became the bride of William H. McDaniel at high noon Tuesday, the Rev. H. H. Griffls officiat ing. Mrs. H. M. Mikkelsen was ma tron of honor and H. M. Mikkelsen was best man. The wedding march was pTayed by Mrs. James D. Gillllan, a sis ter of the bridegroom. Fof the occasion the rooms of the bride's home were hand somely decorated with dahlias and autumn leaves. The bride was gowned In brown taffeta, the gown having beeft remodelled from the wedding dress worn by the bridegroom's mother, 37 years ago. Following the ceremony a wedding collation was served. Mr. and Mrs. Mc Daniel will make their home in Portland. Miss Carol S. Dibble of Salem left recently for Seattle, where she will con tinue her studies with the Cornish School of Music, taking up work in the dramatic department. Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Strahorn are down from Spokane on a combined bus iness and pleasure trip and are stopping at the Hotel Portland. Strahorn is a prominent railroad contractor. Mrs. Thomas W. Spencer is' down from McMinnville for a visit with her daugh ter. Miss Cornelia Spencer, who makes her home at the Hotel Portland. . . Miss Eleanor Adams of Galveston, Texas, is the house guest of Mrs. W. P. Campbell. . Mrs. Randolph Flags afitced - a few friends in for the tea hour Wednesday afternoon. V Mrs. Robinson Honor Guest of Many Affairs 0 NE of the much feted visitors in Portland Is Mra. John Raymond Robinson (Gertrude Towne) of Buffalo. K. Y who is the guest of Miss Madelle Lyon for a short time. Mrs. Robinson is a former Portland girl, whose wed ding was an event of last year at Forest Hall on Columbia river high way. Mrs. Ernest Hamilton Streit and Miss .Lyon entertained at a delightful tea at the home of the former In Lucretla court Saturday. Mra Edward Pape was hostess for a luncheon of six covers at the University club Thursday afternoon, her guests including Mrs. Robinson. Mrs. Victor W. Strode, Miss Madelle Lyon. Mrs. Temple and Mrs. Streit. Friday Mrs. Strode asked a number of girls In for the afternoon In honor Of Mrs. Robinson, who expects to leave for her home In the East early this week. Mrs. Walter Yerian and Mrs. Vernon Wayne Burke entertained the visitor at a dancing party at the home of the former in Irvington Friday eve ning. i Announcement is made of the mar riage of Miss Ruby Faye Robinson and Arthur P. Wilson. The ceremony was performed at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. F. Robin son, in East Madison street. The bride was lovely in a gown of net over, silver cloth, with a tulle veil held In place with a wreath of orange blossoms. She carried a shower bouquet of Bride roses and lilies of the valley. The bridesmaid. Miss Vida Cunningham was charmingly gowned in pink taffeta and carried an arm bouquet of pink carnations. Rusael Jackson was best man. The service was read by the Rev. W. L. Wilson, father of the bride groom, and th bride was g-iven in marriage by her father. Before the ceremony miss Ruth emuckley sang a wedding song. Miss Ruth Journquist played the wedding mach. The cere mony was attended by 'a large number of relatives and friends and was fol lowed by a reception, for which the rooms were artistically decorated with autumn leaves, ferns and flowera The bride is a graduate of Washington high school. Wilson attended Washington high and during the war was in France two years. He Is now a pharmacist connected with the A. W. Allen Drug company. Mr. and Mrs. Wilson will make their home in Portland, In honor of Miss Sara Herns, an at tractive young bride-elect. Miss Tillie Spellman entertained with a trousseau shower at her home Wednesday eve ning. The rooms were tastefully dee orated with gaily colored autumn foliage and flowers. Music and dancing were the features of the evening. The en gagement to Edward Nudelman of Seat tie was recently announced. No definite date for the wedding has been made, but will probably be an event of the ealy winter. The second dance ef the season was given Saturday night at B'nai B'rith with a much larger attendance than fa vored the opening party, a convincing evidence of the need and popularity of regular dances at the building.: Another dance will be given Satt-dayr October 30. with many attractive Halloween fea tures. Mrs. CD. Bruun, who left the city some time ago to place her niece. Miss Edith Marshall, in school in California. Is spending a short time at the Oakland hotel, Oakland. She- will remain 'Uier Miss Nell Parker was hostess "for a delightful bridal shower Wednesday evening, honoring Miss Eva Perry, whose marriage to Eldon J. Evans will be an event of November 4. Gifts of HAZELWOOD SUNDAY DINNER $1.25 Cream of CMcken Corn Sons Veritable Soup ; Celerr Radishei CHOICE OF Lettuce Tomato Salad, French Dressinr Special Fruit SaJal Crab Salad CHOICE OF Baked Salmon or.Halibat Roast Sprint Chicken. GiMet Sauce lout Prime Ribs of Beef, NxraraJ Gravy Lec of Veal. Apple Sauce Stewed Chicken with Noodles Masked or Baked Potatoes CHOICE OF Stewed Fresh Tomatoes Green Lima Beans Striocless Beans CHOICE OF Pie Puddinr or Ice Cream Tea Coffee or Milk Salted Nut Hazchrood Plate Dinner ' 75c Cream of Chicken Corn Soap Choice of Salmon. Halibut Chicken Fricassee with Noodles Rdast Veal with Dressinr Stria less Beans Com on Cob . Mashed or Baked Potatoes Choice of Pie ' Paddint . or Ice Creaa Tea Coffee Milk or Buttermilk Hazelwbod Vegetable Dinner 40c Asparagus on Toast Corn on Cob Green Lima Beans Stewed Summer Squash Bread and Butter Tea Coffee or Milk TSzeloDOod 0J CONFECn0NEKf &RESTMJRANT 3 SS -Washington Street . , j- ij t27 Broadway Music at the Washington St. Hazelwood I T TRS. C..N. Mc ARTHUR (Lucille Smith) ,:wbo has recently I I I Iff returner! to. PMtlandtto soend a few weeks, before re I j turning to Washington, D. C. Mrs. McArthur is living I I at 705 Davis apartments and is being, much entertained. I .1 v a ! J - , -Si l -A'l ' I W.r S. - ' ' ' Kftw 5 S l 3 Iff Mitt I t lp - v ' '. . v' Jf iS n f.'.ft'vw- -sr III 1:1 1 i"- ;r s"' 111 11 1 s : i - i El ill . ' v:7 I li aluminum for the bride's home were brought by girl friends who attended the affair, and the rooms were adorned for the occasion with a bridal motif of hearts. Assisting the hostess were Mrs. Oliver Parker and Mrs. Frank Perry. The supper table was attractively ar ranged with bride dolls and heart place cards. Guests included Mrs. June S. Jones (Roberta Downing), Mrs. W. G. Korlam (Opal Downing). Mrs. Olive lie Clung. Mrs. Dorcas Wells, and the Misses Eva Perry, Olive Landegon. Elsie FitJileftjKern Oswald, Margaret Crawford, Jessie Sawyer, Lazona Melching. jj " . .'JP:; Mrs. George Flavel and Miss Nellie Flavel are here from Astoria for a few days and are guests at the Hotel Port land. Ben Butler Women's Relief corps was host for a dinner served to Portland corps last week and at that time enter- Spinach Corn on Cob V " ' ?-V W S W III tained several guests from other sim ilar organizations. The next meeting will be held Tuesday at 2 o'clock at the courthouse when the Rev. C. E. Cline will give an address on Abraham Lin coin. f? crepes, silks, satins of many hues. Trim mings of striking bead and embroidered designs, wool and very new duvetyn, cannot fail to please. Most reason able they are, too, at $10.00 to $35.00 Hats That Add Charm to Your Costume You arc sure to find what you need to add just the style to top your autumn suit or coat, for there are models for every taste. Hats large, hats small, in black, blue, and navy, with trimming of feathers and ornaments to add color and individuality. And the price, so well within the reach of all, $15.00 Washington Street at Tenth Engagement of Miss Camp M Known at Party AN interesting engagement announce ment was made Saturday at an afternoon party given by Mrs. James A. . Bent when the news " of - the " be trothal of her sister, KTfcs Edith Camp. to Ted Walker was told to a number of friends. . i Miss Camp Is the youngest daughter of Mr. and Mra. H. U Camp and has a host of friends. No definite date has been announced for the wedding. Mr. Walker is, engaged in business in this city. Among those who enjoyed the pleas ant surprise were: Mesdamea Harlan Pearson. George Rotegarde. A. D. Keene. Roy Camp, Hermes Wrlrhtson. the Misses TCasel Camp, Eva Tucker, Eudora Cowan, Aagot Lassen, Lois Martin, Henrietta Haines. Helen Coe, Bernlce and Eva Zimmerman. Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Jackson and Sam- mie Jackson II and Mrs. Etna Ransom left the city early last week for Balti more, Md., where they will spend a short time before going to Virginia to visit at Mr. Jackson's boyhood home. Before returning to Portland they ex pect to make a sea trip through the West India Islands and will return to Portland by way of California. They expect to be absent from the city about two months. Mra Arthur Murray Sherwood asked a few friends in for luncheon Wednes day at her home In Kearney street. The affair was most Informal, and guests included Mrs. Kurt H. Koehler, Mra I. W. L. MacGregor, Mrs. Orenville Vernon, Mrs. Mary H. Scarborough. Mrs. Josephine Andrews, Mrs. Frederick L. Warren, Mrs. George C. W. Low and Mrs.' Antolne G. Labbe. Miss Elisabeth Stansfield and Mrs. John Raymond Robinson were honor guests at a luncheon given by Miss Alva Jo Cage on Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Robert Berger. 79S Melrose drive. Purple asters and Caroline Tes tout rosea decorated the table, around which were seated 12 guests. Following the luncheon Mrs. William Stitt enter tained with a box party at the Baker theatre. see Dr. Emll Enna, pianist; Charles South, violinist; Otto Wedemeyer, bar! tone, and Miss Margaret Nou, accom panlst. were guests at Hill Military academy Wednesday, and gave the cadets an artistic musical program. The honor guests, Messrs. Wedemeyer. Enna and South, are members of the faculty at the academy. Peter A. Porter circle. No. 23, Ladies of G. A. R.,vwlll give an old fashioned basket social Wednesday at Baker's hall, Albina avenue at Kllllngsworth. The women are asked to wear old fash ioned costumes and bring luncheon for two. Miss Ethel Laughlln and Miss Mildred Glascoe. who have been visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William Moser, returned to their home In Chicago Wed nesday. The visitors were extensively entertained during their stay here, ill . BEAUTIFUL ASSORTMENT OF PARTY FROCKS FOR COMING FESTIVITIES See Wathington-St. Window COATS Coats That Coax Autumn Winds to Blow You'll be enchanted with our new showing of coats, so "comfy" and wrap-like they are just the tiling for out doors" in October. The fabrics you've been longing for- duvetyn, yalama cloth, silvertone, peachbloom, velour in varied colorings. Collars and trimmings of moleskin. Australian opossum, nutria and racoon add richness and variety. Silk lined, of expert workmanship and design. We offer unusual values at prices ranging from " $67.50 to $139.50 Suit Blouses That Are Entrancing Gaily tinted, they brighten the most som ber suit Lovely materials, georgettes, Mrs; Shillock Is . To Be Bride b Judge Anderson rT STATEWIDE interest Is the ap-, " preaching marriage of Mrs. Anna C Shillock and Judge Gustav Anderson of Baker, which will be an event-of Wednesday evening at the horns of the bride's sister. Mrs. A. E. Doyle. 1 Mrs. Shillock Is prominent in musical circles of the city and for years has been solo ist at the Westminster Presbyterian church. She has also been supervisor of music in the city schools. Judge Anderson is judge of the eighth judicial district, holding court at Baker. At the wedding Xr. Edward H. Pence will read the - service In the preence of a few close friends and relatives. Marguerite coterie will meet at the home of Mrs. Adams, 198 East Seventy sixth street north, Thursday at 10 a. m. A pot-luck luncheon will be served at 1 o'clock. All resident and sojourn ing Royal Neighbors and friends are Invited. FURS and MYSTERY BT IT. M. UXGAB The sublime Ignorance displayed by Inexperienced clerks in some stores In answering customers' ques tions Is pathetic, but would be Im moderately ludicrous were It not for the fact that it is so often very costly lo the customer. For' Instance, a girl was shopping for a beaver collar, and upon being shown one asked If the fur was genu ine beaver, and the clerk said, "Yes, that is genuine Nutria Beaver." Upon being pinned down for an explana tion of what Nutria in. the clerk said that it Is the fur from a beaver's toinach. . Now, Is it any 'seven-day wonder why people become dissatisfied when their fur apparel does not wear, or look as It Hhould? Nutria, the trade name of the South American Coypu, closely resembles some grades of North American Beaver, but that Is no reason why it should he sold as "Nutria Beaver,'" or the more ridicu lous explanation, "fur from a beav er's stomach." Personal supervision by one of practical experience should be given all transaction In furs. Clerks should have sufficient knowledge of Furs that would enable them to be '.he buyer's assistant, and not merely a selling automaton. The shop of reliable furs will not only represent the merchandine in Its true form, but when nercsdary will also open a seam and chow what Is below the beautiful lining and pad ding. Fur of the wolf makes warm, dur able muffs and robes and Is highly prized by many owners, but, in view of the fact that a majority of people are but children In the hands of the unscrupulous dealer, It Is well to Beware of the Wolf In Sheep's Clothing. (To Be Continued.) Copyright. 1S20. A'lv: Every good reo on for - looking your best when 'Cheerful Credit it youra for the asking. The Gray-Tile Corner L