THE DALLES DAILY CHRONICLE, SATURDAY, APRIL 2, 1921. PAGE TWO Social Activities and Other Things Who wantB winter the year around? Tho bright sunshine and the .wild flowers are lurlns people into tho country again. Laht Sunday after noon the roads near town were lined -with automobiles and pedestrians, and in most Instances people's arms were filled with wild flowers. Do spite rough roads a few undertook longer drives to Dufur and Hood River; and during the week several have gone to Portland over the high way. Tho present prospects are good for motoring expeditions, picnics and other out of door recreations, In the near future. Mies Cummin's Recital. MIsh Lucllc Cummins gave the sec ond of a series of small recitals Wed nesday evening. The children who participated were: Adelaide Ketch urn, Saraboll Milne, Lexio Thrall, Grace Woodraff, Leda Thompson, Marjorie Brlngolf, Grace Farrlngton, Thomas Ward, 'Marjorie Manchester, Ruth Heater, Mnrlenm Ilfil, Ruth Kurtz and Goldie Thompson. Miss Cummins gave a dcmonstralion In ear training and scale and chord building, which was very Interesting. She ' expects to give a public re cital in the early part of May, demon- titrating class work. .. v Blue Bird Party. Mrs. Gus Pearson was hostefiB to tho Dlue Bird Bridge and Luncheon club, Wednesday. Luncheon was served at Hotel Dalles at 1 o'clock. Clever corsage bouquets of candy wero at each plate. The tables were decorated with Easter lilies. After the luncheon tho ladles were In vited to Mrs. Pearson's home, where the afternoon was spent at bridge. The members and gliosis present wero: Mrs. Vesta Mays, Mrs. H. C. Ollnger, Mrs. Pat Foley, Mrc. Tom West, Mrs. Robert Bradshaw, Mrs. Ben R. Lltfln, Mrs. J. B. Kllmwo, Mrs. C. A. Johnston, Mr.s Thomas R. Hudson, Mrs. Chauncey Butler and Mrs. Gus Pearson. I Thursday Night Club. Mrs. Thomas R. Hudson and Mis. Chauncey Butler wore hostesses to tho Thursday Night Bridge club, at the home of Mrs. Hudson. A color scheme In yollov was carried out. Delicious refreshments were served. Tho members and Invited guest ero: Miss Dorothy Balleyj MIh Cella Gavin, MIsb Margaret Sampson, Miss Geraldlno Kolley, Miss AH "ti Kelley, Aliss Edna Pease, Mls-i tyr. tin Rorden, Mrs, Clifton Condon, Mvs. Francis V. Galloway, Mrs. Chauncey Butler, Mrs. Josopha Fulton, Mrs. Carol Pntterson (Ruth Kelley), Mrs. F. S. Ralston, Mrs. J. I. Chambers, Mrs. F. B. Shirley, Mrs. John Will, Mrs. R. C. Bradshaw, Mrs. Ben R. Lltfln, Mrs. J. M. Koontz and Mrs. T. R. Hudson. . Party for Howard 8mith. Mrs. C. B. SmltU save a delightful children's party on Wednesday eve ning for her son, Howard, In honor or his twelfth birthday. Twelve guests were present and 12 candles attorned thu birthday cake. Various games wore enjoyed and delicious refreshments wero served despite tho disappearance of the Ico cream from the rear porch, which was not ac cording to program at all, and which aroused great Indignation among the guests. Those present wero: Howard Smith, Lillian Malloy, Dorothy Curl, Thulma Roams, Eugenia Bogue, Mil Ileum Walker, Mildred Sherer, Win field Boguo, Stowart McPherson, Hurt Pauley, Benjamin Pcnnevs and Arthur Pennors. Narcissus Tea. Tho Good Jntent socloty of tho Methodist church hold a delightful meeting Wednesday in the Y, W. C. A. rooms, featuring a Narcissus Tea. Mrs. W. H. H. Forsyth, Mrs. S. 11. Saunders, and Mrs. George Pfhnoy were tho hostesses. The decorations were In gold and white with beauti ful bunches of narcissus artistically arranged about tho room; tho re freshments also 'were In gold and white. They consisted of Ice cream, ake, lady fingers and tea. After tho business session a short urogram -was rendered, Mrs. C. R. Marshall gave a contralto solo and graciously responded with an eneoroj; John Crofton Cave a pleaBlng piano solo, will; un encoro; and Miss Zada French gave an Interesting talk on tho Y. W. 0. A. work In foreign countries and told of tho work of the Y. W. 0. A. girls among the Un migrants who laud at Kills Island. About HO ladles were present. Junior AM Party. Miss Edna Pease was hostess to the Junior Aid society of tho Con fregattonal church, Wednesday uf ternoon, at lior home, Assisting norl tosses were Mrs. F. S. Gannett and Miss ,Frudence Patterson. Mrs. Peg- gy Sullivan and Mrs. M. U. Ross poured. Miss Zada French, field sec- retary of the Y. W. work, gave an Interesting talk on the international work of that organization. 73 Join Church. Easter Sunday was a red letter day in the history of the First Con- gregational church. The largest class that ever entered at one time was received at the morning service. Seventy-three persons made their decision to enter into Its fellowship;-' ,of this number 69 were received and the others will follow. There were 56 adults, 25 men, 31 women and 13 young people of the teen age. Forty six entered on confession of faith, the rest by transfer. Thirty-five were baptized. There were also " others received before Easter making 80 new members since the coming of the pastor. The Men's club which was recent- ly organized now numbers nearly 60 1 members. The membership of this club is limited to tha supporters of tho church. The Ladles' Aid so- cleties have a membership of 85, the Sunday school 130. Senior and jun- lor Endeavor societies, Boy Scouts and Cadet troops are also organized, j Five Hundred Party. Mrs. J. C. Johnson entertained with Five Hundred at her homo Mon- day evening. The following guests were present: Mrs. J. W. Allen, Mrs. B. A. Amy, Mrs. B. T. Pillars, Mrs. J. B. Kirk, Mrs. H. W. Denney, Mrs. George Penny, Mrs. Rex Ward, Mrs. Arthur Seufert, Mrs. F. M. Sexton, Mrs. R. W. Johnson, Mrs. A. S. Rob erts, Mrs. 'Fred Walker, Miss Grace Egbert and Miss Elizabeth Bell. De licious refreshments wore served. St. Mary's Muslcate. A4urgo and appreciative audience of friends and patrons of St. Mary's academy fillell its auditorium to ca pacity last night to enjoy a musical and literary program, presented by the students of the academy. Thei Bplendld rendition of tho "Pen Gynt Suitot," from Grieg showed the care-j ful and painstaking training than characterizes the work of, the ters of the Holy Names. The lowing program was rendered: Program: T? onil In f TtlnirrnnJiv.Olipe sis fol Kftthleen Duffy Reading-Norwegian -Wedding March julla Bannon Piano Duet Norwegian Wedding March Margaret Malone, Eliza- bet Fratlos. ) Reading To Spring Floronco McDonald. Violin Solo To Spring Mildred Strong. j Reading Peer Gynt end Ingrld ! Marcolla Hlllgen Piano Solo Peer Gynt and Ingrid I -'Mildred Storey pursu,t of happiness; and he hr.'t go-Reading-Troll Dance. Elizabeth Bird ,ng Q ,pt ,hem try u Qn hg pHson. Piano Solo-Troll Dance HeIon , ers," was the decision of his audience. Schlickclsor. j Rending Death of Ase Margaret . . , ,,,, , " V , Now York. City is going to be lifted Malone. , . . . , c.i- t. i. ... 'up one floor, and be a ocm-l story Piano Solo Death of Ase Anna ' . i town In at least one sens, before McLean. 1 ..,. .,. Reading-Arabian Dance Kath- ,mich lo"Br' 8n'8 ,ta arehitMcU. 1 ho orlno Brookhouso. ' stroot ,evel win be 8,ve" "P complete- Violin Solo Arabian Dance .Lloyd !' to Public passagoways and automo Prank, I bllo parking space, while shops anJ Rending Anltra's Dance Mario offlcos will begin tholv existence one McCormlck. ; flight up,t was tho doamniiJea gener- Plano Solo Anltra's Dance Eliza- ally accepted at the Nov.- York uec- both Fratles. tlou of tho American Solely cf Civil Reading Solvelg's Song....Anna Shea Engineers tho other night. Tho con Vocal Solo Solvelg's Song Kath- gest inn or the streets ceoni to make no loon Duffy. ' other plan workable. Reading Morning Mood Meta Stegmau. Piano Solo Mornlns Mood gnrot Malone. Mar" Reading Storm Justine Rondeau Piano Solo Storm ..Voru Frank Reading Cradle Song Mildred Strong. Piano Solo Cradlo Song Mar colla Hlllgen. Trio Cradle Song Agnos Mor- gliftdn. Marie Herbrlng, Elisa beth Fratles. Vocal Trio Avo Maria Marchettl Kathleen Duffy, Mario Herbrlng, Elizabeth Fratles. Chorus La Spagnolu Di CUIauu Singing Class. Odell Dancing Party. Mr. and Mrs. John G. Odell gavo a dancing party at tholr home In Elm street, Thursday night. Th rooms were uitlstlcally decorated with Ore- gon grape predominating. Mlsa Beu lull Patterson served the punch; Mrs. W. C. Waldron, Mrs. Clyde Seltt and LM " Weil Hi rST The Vh. meat, were served In the easement.! which hud been cleverly arranged for the event. The guest list Includ ed Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Waldron, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Thomas, Mr. and Mrs. I Carlton P. Williams, Mr. and Mrs. John Van Dellen, Dr. and Mrs. C. R. Lyda, Mr. and Mrs. Guy feades Mr and Mrs. R. L. Kirk, Mr. and Mrs. Carlton L. Pepper, Mr. and Mrs. O.. R. Krier, Mr., and Mrs. Sidney Bloom, Mr. and Mrs. Don Yantis, Mr. and Mrs. Hallie Rice, Mr. and Mrs. L. Barnum, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Pearson, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Greene, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Seltz, Mr. ana Mrs. T. H. West, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Kllmore, Mr. and Mrs. F. L. Phlpps, Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Lubbe, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Maxon, Mr and Mrs. Francis V. Galloway, Dr. and Mss. p. L. Marsh, Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Esseltyn, Mrs. Constance Hodder, E. F. Van Schoick, Clyde Scherrer, Migs Prudence Patterson, Miss Beulah Patterson, and Miss Virginia Mc- Pherson. Nydla Club Meets. Mrs. George Blakeley, Mrs. Guy ades and Mrs. S. R. Tripp, were hostesses to the Nydla club, which met at Mrs Blakeley's home, this af- ternoon The ladies were busy wlth needlework and a p,ea8ant 80Clai time wag Light refreshments . wero served Historical Society, The historical society will give a social afternoon at Hotel Dalles Tues- day. It has invited the Sorosls club to be its guests at that time. fTues- day is the regular meeting day of the Sorosls club and an excellent musical program has been arranged. In order that the Sorosls club may cooperate with the Historical society, a short business session will be held in the parior8 0f Hotel Dalles, early in the afternoon. The musical program will be rendered, after which cards, neodlework and a social timb will be enjoyed. Bungalow Orchestra Elks' hall, Monday, April 4. 4 Orange Sherbet Everyone knows the delicious Phe.t teplace sherbets. Special for Satur day and Sunday. Phetteplace stores. 2 JL NEW YORK, April 2. Not only are blondes bad for men's eyes, as a scien tist of some sort pronounced recently, but they are dangerous ns arbiters of destiny. -Such, at least,, is the opinion ot' Jud6e William Morris of the muni- clpal court. "There will be no blondes on this Jury. They are too fickle." Thoso are the words with which ho dynamited the atmosphere or thu court room the other day just beforo the selection of a Jury. Then he.direc- ted all the brunette women in tho court, to come before him immediately for examination as Jurors. "Sometime, BOniehow, a blonde must have inter- fGred with his honor's HiV. liberty or It's too bad from the viewpoint of practical results, that all benefit en- tortalnment managers can't take ad vantage of tho Innovation adopted the other night at tho Boys' Club affair, and let tho audience get first hand ac quaintance with the people to be ben efited. Naturally It can't bo done in most cases. But from tho moment the Hippodrome stage revealed GOO excited youngsters from Now York's East Side, representing pretty nearly ovory nation on earth, and heard them sing occasionally far away from the , tune "America, the Beautiful," the ,Doys' Club meant something to them 1 which it never In the world would have done if that personal contact, httd not betm n,ade lt wa8 hard to realie that there were 640f more boys ,n ,he club who couldn.t crowd . hut fi00 enoueh to make almost any point. iNew York subway crowds may -ometlme. lose their curtesy, but York newspapers, never. The UKUe of this Item proves It. "The marriage of Dalbert Eugene Bene, aa actor, living at 229 West Forty-sixth Letter Y. W. : 1 LILILLflHflLlg LLLLLHLILHsTCat.7 'iHliH During 1920 the Young Women's Christian Association was represent ed in fourteen countries in Europe, South America, the Near East and the Orient. In all its foreign ac tivities the Association's policy has street, and Miss Florence Buchnan, an actress, of Des Moines, Iowa, took place yesterday," the papers said. Mr. Benn is 45 years of age, and Miss Buchnan said she was 25." Could any. doubt be more nicely covered"? Fat men are rising in voluble ranKs to protest the decision of the New York Customs Cutters club to matte belts compulsory. The decree was is sued the other day to make this spring's trousers with no buttons to hook galluses to has aroused a con siderable part of -our male population, "We're willing tO'wear belts for the looks, if you insist," wailed those 180 pounders and up, "but we DON'T want to wear them tight enough to do away with our inside suspenders." The human sense of humor doesn't change, says Joo Jackson, the Hippo drome cown. (And he can make out a pretty good" case for his contention In 15 years he has changed neither properties nor costume, and his ant remains fundamentally the same as it was when he decided, years ago at 10 minutes notice, to forsake bicycle riding for clowning. Of course he has added bits from time to time, but ev- ery one is a variant upon the dlscom- fiture of an innocent, victim of clrcum- stances. "Only when the crowd ceas- es to laugh at the sight of a prosper- ous churchgoer chasing his silk hat down Fifth Avenue on Easter Sunday, will I find myself out of style in tho theater," says Jackson. 'NEW YORK, Mar. 1. The newest .nuMonnl Qag on display in this city ot many flags is that of the French pro- tectorate of Syria. It hangs in a restaurant down in Washington street 'hat habitat of itinerant rug sales- 'men and the swarthy vendors of all sons oi nanaicrau irom me iwur 'East. The flag is the Tricolor of 'France,, and in the white bar is nn evergreen tree, representing the ceaar of Lebanon. ' aiayoe, mis is supposes to oe a ' . . deterrnnt to too earlv mnrr acres. And again, it might not work out that way. Anyway, Vice-Chariccllor Mai- colm G. N. Buchanan, over In New 'Jersey, has ruled that any marriage In which the bridegroom is under IS An Announcement OF INTEREST TO CASINO THEATRE PATRONS i It gives great pleasure to announce that at a very early date the Casino Theater will see the engagement of the most beautiful and unusual entertainment ever presented in this city. This unusual attraction is coming to The Dalles to amaze, de light and thriU theatregoers. It is riot GRAND OPERA, it is" not DRAMA, it is not TRAGEDY, it is not COMEDY, it is not CHOREOGRAPHIC ART, it is not POETRY, nor is it a PAINTING. And yet those of you who are fortunate, enough to witness it will find it is a composite of all these arts a new and an EIGHTH ART combining the beauties'of all the other arts, welded together in one perfect, harmonious whole by the MAS TER MAGICIAN OP THE AGE. CASINO THEATRE MANAGEMENT. See Monday's Chronicle for Further InforauitkHi C. A. Conference, been to carry on its work until, an Indigenous movement could be de veloped, in other words to build up Freeh, Italian, and Chinese Associa tions but not to develop American organizations in foreign countries. It is at 'the urgent request of seven must be considered as a "trial mar nage," . which he may terminate 'whenever he desires. The ruling was made in the case of a man who de cided, he wished to have his marriage annulled. And annulled it will be. Jammed bus tops; frequented bridle paths; children in Central park; dis trait looks through office windows, over the roof tops, through the electric 'sign skeletons, and on to Invisible golf links; more or less hectic dis cussions of the Palmer beer rullnq and whatit means. Myriads of quut- ed satin coats; a tremendous impetus in the sales of used automobiles; over stayed lunch hours; arid sublet apart ment ads; those are the highlights of the early Spring in New York. And they have Just exactly the'same effect on the population generally as have crocuses and robins and garden-plant-elsewhere. The signs may not be f- as soul-filling, but the causes and I effects are, Maybe this was one sympton of Springtime; A man who said he was Edward Hopltinson Smith and lived at theHotel, Biltmoro, went to an automobile "Showroom the other day not of U8ed cars, either and having ch0sen a $4000 car. offered his check , payinent, ,He wa8 surprised and grjeve(1 to discover they wouldn't take so goodly a cneck from a stranger( . an(, expres8ed his surprise in th.e nauteur wltn wnlch he 8tarted to ,eave tne piace He conquered his griev- ance long enough, however, to- come back and ask for a loan of 25 cents 'wUh which he might take a taxi, 4 Later he was taken In custody as 1 navjng escaped, from an asylum, . ,n0 one can insist any longer that playwrights and managers refuse to credit tneir audiences with any Intel- Hgence. For several seasons that plaint has regularly been put for- ward; they "played down" to a lower j plain of understanding than the aud- ; ience really possessed, said the plaint uw meu, a penecuy serious . . author, and an eaually serious nro- ducer and manager have put on a play which only a oulja board or a very high understanding, indeed, could decipher offhand. For instance, i j at one stage, an actor goes to open China European countries' and the Near East that one hundred and thirteen secretaries are still in those coun tries working in sixty-one centers. See the four reel film on "China Today" at the Methodist church to morrow evening. a door. There is no indication of wind or any other, force, animate or inanimate, but it takes all of his 1 strength to force the door open. And that meano that he is struggling against the force of nature. So !I was assured by one who was "on the in side;" but there was no word given to the hoi polloi as to all its significance. They were just supposed to get it 'Through the example of the lowly snail we are to have the principle of heredity proven to us, now. Pro fessor Harry Cramptom of the Amer- 'lean Museum of Natural History, just 'home from Polynesia, has brought with him a thousand or so specimens of these little creatures, and declares that they prove the theory that evo lution is the . result of heridlty and not of environment. There are large numbers of facts given in his proof; .but the thought of the snail sticking true to his caste- through countless generations is sue a an attractive one 'that details seem unimportant. i There is no escaping the fact that the audiences are taking better to such things is "The Love Speqi!," the true "hero" type tof drama, acted tor the screen by Wallace Held, than they are to the wholly symbolical affairs, whether they are screened or talked. "The Love Special" Is the sort of thing that, after all, we do .en joy. It has our own Rocky Moutalns in it, and steam engines tearing through them, racing autos, bursting dams, a lovely heroine acted by Agnes Ayres and a hero as is a hero. The play is made from Frank Spear man's novel, "The Magnate's Daugh ter," and all of us who remember Frank -Spearman's thrilling railroad stories can be prepared for -the pic- ture, ' j TripVs Cleaning and Dye works. 310 Union street. ' A20 Notice I will not be responsible for any bills contracted on' my ac&unt with-' ... v . , , out a written order. Dated March 30. . v. . " . 1921. R. E. Doyle. 9 Taxi Service Day or night. Stand atXJlub Cigar store. Telephone red 1711.' R. Wintor- muth.