Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 18, 1922)
SECOND NEWS SECT10H PAGES 1 TO 4 1 .1- y. Society, Editorial, General News and Classified SEVENTH-SECOND YEAR SALEM, OREGON, FRIDAY MORNING, AUGUST 18, 1922 PRICE 5 CENTS 1 -4-,. i I 'I 4 ;' - r i j v t . . r V ISP By MARGUERITE GLEESON M ISS Mary Schultz, violinist, and Franklin Launer, pian . ist, will giT & Joint concert for the benefit of the Salem hos pital 'early in September, accord ing to an '' Announcement made yesterday. It has not been de cided where the concert will be given nor the exact date. Miss Schultz who retnrnel hornet Jast spring following fire years study In New York will re turn to her 'work In ? New York during September. She gave a concert during May following her return , to Salem and her many friends here and In Marion and Polk' county will be glad to know that cbe Is to play again in Sa lem before going east. J .. Mr. Launer has spent the sum mer studying with Percy Gran ger and will teach in the school iDf music at Willamette university the coming- year. He" has never given a concert in Salem before and although wejl known here his friends arid admirers will have the first opportunity to hear him In such a concert it is anticipated that the 'concert will be well attended especially con sidering that it is a benefit for the hospital. ; ' - . TLo American 'War Mothers will 'meet this afternoon to attend the funeral of Mrs.-Aiw -na Beier, a gold star War 'Moth er, whose son, Paul Rich, was am ong tne nrst Oregon men killed overseas. Mrs. Beier w. id to have been' one of the most faithful members of the local Chapter. Tho funeral la o'clock from RIgdon's chapel. Three musical numbers consid ered to be unusually good will be presented by the Salem Musical bureau during the . comincr year. it ; hai been announced. Roval Dadnum, Victor artist and singer with the Metropolitan comDar.y will appear November 27; Mr- ceie uupree, organist, planif-; and composer from Paris on b'Jk first tour of the United Stater will be presented November 24. Mar guerite d'Alvarez, mtralto, will be in Salem Octob 20. (f Mrs. Mary Billiigs of West Sa lem returned Monday evening from a weeks visit iv Portland. ' i - " ' ' The Aid society of West Sa lem will hold a cooked food salo late in the "week for the benefit of tb.3 West Salem church. Dr. and Mrs.. Fred Ellis have gone to ' the Tillamook beaches for & two weeks vacation. , . . Mrs. G. W. Dorrence of Lead. South Dakota, is a guest of Mrs. Ed" Brock in West Salem) Mrs. Dorrence , was supreme represen tative 'of the Pythian Sisters to 200 Women Wanted for work in our canning department Report Monday morning, August 21, at Kings Food Products Co: the Supreme Temple meeting re-. cently in San Francisco. She is returning home by the northern route red will go to Seattle, Van couver and Victoria. Mrs. Dorrance and Mrs. Brock are old time friends and have not eeen each other for 20 years. Mis Frances M. Richards and Miss Helen Pierce are home from a three weeks trip to Alaska.' They went as far north as Kodiak. Mrs. George Rodgers was host ess Wednesday afternoon for a nu'jber of old friends of Mrs. S. AWiggins, of Toppenish, Wash. Tne affair was .informal, a num ber of friends coming to tea. Miss Jeannette Olsen is visit ing with her sister, Mrs. J. Hop kins in Portland. Mrs. Lenora Kay Roberts of Hood River was a guest of her sister, Mrs. C P. Bishop In Port land during the hospitalities for Mr. and Mrs. Calvin CooHdge early in the week. Mr. and Mm. E. L. Baker left yesterday for Seal Rocks where tbjrwill remain for two weeks enjoying an annual vacation. Mr. and Mrs. Ronald C. Glover left yesterday for Foley Spring on a vacation. Mrs. Glover's mo ther, Mrs. Byars, will go on to Roseburg for a visit with friends and relatives. Miss Mary Schultz will appear in concert at the Monmouth Nor mal EChool, August 28. Many Sa lem friends or Miss Schultz are planning to attend the concert. The program will include some of the same numbers given by Mls3 Schults at her Salem concert with a number of others not given be fore. .' Miss Gladys Dimeler has gone to Newport for a two weeks vaca tion. She will be, the house guest or Mrs. T. M. Barr while at the' coast. 101 J ID ldele Garrison's Xew Phase of REVELATIONS OF A WIFE to :- CHAPTER 100 THE DOCTOR'S VERDICT "Oh. Madge!" Dicky's voice sounded cheerily through the door. "I've brought the doctor with me. May we come In?" My mother-in-law turned from the bureau drawers into n h'.ch she was putting the garments she had unpacked trom the suitcases belonging to Dicky and me, ana stiffened into wrathful, astonish ed protest. She had fed me efficiently, and in the same manner as if I had been my own small son, on some appetizing but woefully attenuat ed delicacies, dubbed in hospital parlance, "right diet," and had combed my hair and put on a dressing sack over my night at tire. But she had sternly forbid den me even to sit up in bed, save for the brief period of my breakfast. And I had rebelliou- ly watched and resented her un deniable capability as she put the room in order. An Embarrassing Reception. It is torture to me to lie in bed unless I am really ill." and added to this discomfort was the fact that I was hungry. Ever sJnce the grinning Miady had carried away the tray of dishes my mcther-iiv-law had ordered, I had been tormenting myself with culinary visions of thick steaks, broiled to a turn, roasted chick ens ard all the rest of my favorite viands. Not (that I disliked the broths and toast and gTuels which my mother-in-law had planned for me. But I craved stronger food. "What on earth doety this mean?" she wfathfully demanded when she had caught her breath. "I ordered no; physician. You need a doctor about as much as a cat needs two tails. Them's nothift? the matter with you that rest and light diet won't cure." She evidently scorned to lower iior vnlre: Every word must he sti aightened his fate most professional taien. "Now I wish my prescription followed exactly," he said. "Rest here an hour, then rise, take a cold thower or sponge if there isn't a shower here dress, eat a pie?c of thick, juicy broiled steak, a baked potato, a glass of milk, and top off with some let tuce or celery. Then run wild in those woods out there only be careful toot to get overtired." (To be continued) SILVERTON NEWS ishing it. Fortunately no one was iniured m the accident- Mr. and Mrs. Peter Woelke and daughter of Hazel Green wore Sunday visitors with the former's brother. Joseph Woelke. Mr. and Mrs. Harding Uaugb man and father, J. H. Kanghman, visited Monday at the George Vinton home. Threshing was resumed "Tues day &fter a few days lay off on account of the rain. NEW CORPORATIONS I incorporators. Vic'oria Grerc. iMchael Ray. Fete Veny, Joeph A. Greco; capitalization, $lKiJ. - Home Chemicals Pro-Jucts com pany, Portland; incorporators. F. j. Pohs. August Hochschild. Mary Pohs; capitalisation, 250&. A permit to operate la Oregon was lned to the North Pacific Mortgage company, a - Wash-as-ton concern with headquarters la the city of Seattle. '..--S ' IN .TINS IN;tOAyES?: SILVER! ON, Or., Aug. 17. (Special to The Statesman) Rev. and Mrs." George Henriksen motored to Canby Tuesday after noon. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Tinglestad left Wednesday for Hood River where Mr. Tinglestad will teach during the coming year in the high school. Miss Florence Wallasee of Sher idan, Wyo., has been secured to take charge of the Silverton hos pital. Miss aWllasee comes high ly recommended. Miss Adeline Ness, who has been visiting here from South Dakota, has secured a position to teach in the blind school at Sa lem. Miss Ness taught in a re form school in the east. Articles of incorporation were filed with the etate corporat'on department yesterday by the Cir cle Theater company of Portland, capitalized at $S0,000. The in corporators are G. T. Woodlaw F. W. Normand and T. M. Ham burger. Other articles Med yes terday were: Evcn'resh Mir!:et. Portland BttT Thm m Mamtmrd Plmmtmr For Coughs and Cold, Headr ache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism and All Aches fnd Pains v ALLDRUCCISTS 35c and 65c,' jar and tuba Hospital aixa, $3.00 , M - i - NORTH HOWELL V. L. Morgan and Mr. and. Mrs. Rale'f-h Dunn were Salem visi tors Friday last. Mr. and Mrs. James McGwire and tc children, Jamie and Mary Jane returned Saturday from a week's visit on the Siletz. While en route home their car ran off the grade, plunging down a steeo embankment and almost demol- AT LA The H. W. Gossard Co. makers of the world-famed GOSSARD FEONT LACING CORSETS have been persuaded to make a GOSSARD QUALITY corset to sell at Model 20O . A truly remarkable corset tor the aver age to stout figures. : The comfortable ton graduates to a Bllghtly higher back to care for excess flesh at the should er blades. The me dium 1 length skirt has ample . fullness to insure comfort through" hips and thighs and Is char- : acterlzed by those very flat back lines . every fashlonabla . - woman seeks today. Made of pink or . white coutUt f Model 22 A very modern cor set fashioned for the slight to medi um figures. The low top curves un der the bust to a slightly higher sup port at the back. The skirt slopes to medium length ov er hips and thighs to give long grace ful lines and grad uates to a medium length. unusually flat back. Made of a dainty pink fancy batiste. GOSSARD quality guarantees you what you have, never before-been' able to buy ; a $2 corset guar anteed by a name and reputation that must be safeguarded. If you have never worn a Gossard, $2 is surely a small sum to find out a becoming style and grace ful comfort such as you have never known before. If you have thought this gentlewoman's corset cost more than you cared to pay, you now are offered the opportunity to know its refinements at a price heretofore -unthought of for garments of such superiod quality. " 4 3 : GOOD GOODS HAVE DARK HI AND LOOK lie Nobody Can Tell When --You Darken Gray, Faded If air With Sage Tea Grandmother kept her hair beautifully darkened, glossy and hi.! Keen distfnctiyaudlbleo-tftnttractlYe -wlth a brew of Sage the other side of the door. And when in answer to my hasty. auavenne "come in," the opened. door I saw by Dicky s indig nant face that he and the phy had. Indeed, heard every word. There was no Indignation however, in the twinkling brown eves of the giant who stepped over the doorsill in Dicky's wake, strode to the bedside, and looked down at me. He looked as if he wre zoine to burst into a hearty laugh the next second, and I felt my neryous annoyance at my mo ther-in-law's rudeness slip away from me. The very appearanca . . aW. of the man his siaiure, m width of his shoulders, his keen, hnmerous. kindly iac! simVij radiated strength and healing "So you're the young woman Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mixture was applied, with won derful effect. By asking at any drug store for "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe, improvod by the addition of other ingredients, all ready to nse, at very little cost. This simple mixture can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well known down town drug gist says everybody uses Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it darkens so natur ally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied it's so easy to use, too. You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and oraw it through the hair, tak- who doesn't need the extra cat's ing one strand at a time. By hA brawled. lOOKing me over keenly. "Well, ma'am. turnii g unexpectedly on my mo ther-in-law, "I agree with yon. She looks as if she could kill a ba-ar this mawnin'." Mother Graham Outgeneraled. My mother-in-law's face was. a study. The big man had agreed with her so aptly and with such n inimitable air of deference that lor once in her life she had nothinr to say. I caught Dicky's ava rrtr h.r shoulder, and he dronned his left eyelid. I knew then that he had primed the phy sician before he brought him to my room as to my desire to get out into the air, and my motner iti-law's determination to keep me in bed. "I bee -everybody's pardon; nirkv nut in smoothly. "I should have introduced Dr. Paige. Dr Palee. my mother, Mrs. Graham. and my wife, who also answers to that name when she is in good humor.' The bie physician gave a laugh that would have rattled the win dows if they had been less secure ly set In their places. "She doesn't look Jery can tankerous, ' he drawled, smmnB down at me, "but you can never tell. Well, now, ma'am, I sup pose I'd better earn my fee. ai- way. Just put this unaer your tongue." taken a clinical ther mometer from its case and pop ped It into my mouth as he spoke. While he waited for its verdict he felt my pulse, and whon he took the thermometer out of my mout'a he scanned my tongue gravely. Then the twinkle came Into hi3 eyes again. "When did you eat?" Mr mother-in-law answered him in staccato accents. -About half an hour ago What?" She told him succinctly. The twinkle was more pronounced than ever as he listened. .. Then morning, the gray hair disap pears; alter another application or two, it is restored to its natur al color, and looks glossy, soft and beautiful. Adv. owirt the approval of a community reqjiires umailing quality PEOPLE'S CASH STORE Salem and Eugene A Lucky Purchase 217 NEW STYLE ZJL' In a sensational selling that will unearth handsome savings to those who aro fortunate enough to take part in the sa& MlijtA i Great Selling of Women's Fall Wearables Here Is the Story in Brief: The Coats represent a manufacturer's line and were tV( offered to us at great price concessions in ueu or spot krr t' it- 4 .s.'g cash. Seeing an opportunity to benefit our patrons, we accepted the proposition and here they are, spick and span as they had just left the hands of the examiner. Here are short and full length coats In Plush, Velour, Polo Cloth and Many Other Styles of All-Wool Coats and Fur Coats Here is how the prices will range: $35.00 $30.00 $27.50 values values values S16.D5 $14.05 $25.00 $20.00 $17.50 values values values $12.50 $10.0.1 8.75 Satisfaction Guaranteed Or Money Back AH Wool Jersey SIORT Jackets A quality that is being sold every day at $5. SO. Our stock consists of red, brpwn, Copenhagen, blue, black and lavender. And OUR price is ONLY $2.98 Ladle Kilk Caml!oIe Light and dark colors, made of washable silk messalinc. Special at 98 c $1.50 riire Silk JIwe ' In all sizes and colors. Famous Paramount and, Kotasenie make. Special at 89c . Jl Charming Blouses Now offered at half of their real worth Great variety of fine Georgette, Crepe de Chine, Pongee, Minnonette and the new Royal Shirt Waists ranging from the sim plest to the most elaborate styles. The prices are 98c, $1.98, $2.98 ,0) if i - Let Us Redeem Your Hop Checks "ZTJ