Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (July 11, 1928)
THE OREGON STATESMAN, SALEM, OREGON. WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 11, 1928 Guest in Med ford For a Fortnight Mies Rosalie Jones, daughter of Mrs. V. Al Jones, Is spending a fortnight in Med ford as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. Porter. Miss Jones will accompany Mr. and Mrs. Porter on a trip to Crater i Lake. Miss Marion Linn Entertains With Attractive Afternoon f Affair Miss Marlon Linn entertained with an attractive informal tea Saturday afternoon in her home on the Salem-Silverton Highway. Baskets of pink and white rose buds were arranged about the liv ing rooms. At the tea hour, Mrs. L. It. Linn and Miss Mary Fake presided at the serving urns. The Misses Eu nice Watts, Thelma Leek and Nor ma Leek assisted in serving. The guests were: Mrs. Charles Fake, Miss Mary Fake, Mrs. S. J Probeit, Mrs. James McClelland. I)nrv l.vhiLrr Miais M n r. garet Brown, Mrs. F. P. Phipps, Miss Gladys Humphrey, Mrs. Rich ard Chittenden, Misi Hazel Brew er, Mrs. John Leek, Miss Thelma Leek, Miss Norma Leek, Miss Eth el Hardle, Miss Iva Henry, Miss Eunice Watts, Mrs. L. R. Linn, Miss Grace Linn, and the hostess, k" Miss Marion Linn. Annual Convention of Span ink Veterans Auxiliary in Session Tomorrow The department of Oregon Aux iliary to the United Spanish War Veterans will meet in McMinnville for its 12th annual convention Thursday, Friday and Saturday, July 12. 13, and 14. Mrs. Mamie D. Linville, depart ment president, will preside at all Missions. The officers of Socut Young Auxiliary, No. 3, of Port land will exemplify the ritualistic work. Special visitors to the conven tion will include: Mrs. Margaret Manlon, national president, of Mil waukee, Wisconsin; Mrs. Julia Shakespear, national junior vice- president, of Everett, Washington; and John Garrity, commander-in-chief of the United Spanish War Veterans, of Chicago. - Return from Week's Motor Trip to Southern Oregon.. jT. Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Burner ' and their daughter, Miss' Ruth Buchner, -have returned from a week's motor trip to Crater Lake. Young Married People's Club Will Have Picnic This Evening The oung Married People's Club of the First Presbteri&n Church will be entertained with a picnic this evening at Hager'a Each couple will bring a covered-dish and rolls. The committee I, in charge of the affair will pro ' -f vide the dessert and coffee. As this is the first picnic of the reason, a large crowd is expected to be present. Mr. and Mrs. N. M. Finkbiner are in charge of the arrangements. 1 1 v i SOCIAL CALENDAR Today Needlecraft club. Mr?. I. L. Mc- Adams. 245 D street, hostess. 2:30 o'clock. Woman's Missionary Society, First Presbyterian Church. Church parlors. 2:30 o'clock. Barbara Frletehie Tent. No. 2. Woman's Club-houcc, N. Cottage St. 8 o'clock. W. II. M. S. and W. F. M. S. of First M. E. Church. Joint meet ing. Mrs. M. C. Find ley. 21Z N 20th St., hostess. 2:30 o'clock Ladies' Aid Society and W. II. M. S. or Leslie M. E. Church. Cov-ered-dish luncheon, 12 o'clock. W. F. M. S.. W. II. M. S. and Ladies' Aid Society Jason Lee Cnurch. Church parlors. Pot-luck luncheon, 12 o'clock. Woman's Missionary Society. First Christian Church. Church parlors. 2:30 o'clock. Young Married People's Club, Fim Presbyterian Church. Pic nic. Hager's Grove. Thursday Sahem O. A. C. club. Picnic. Ha zel Green Park. Afternoon and evening. Ladies' Aid Society. W. R. C. Fairgrounds. All-day meeting. Lunhceon served at 12 o'clock. Public installation of officers, United Artisans. Fraternal Tem ple. 8:30 o'clock. Business meet ing, 8 o'clock. Friday Chemeketa Chapter, D. A. R. Mrs. I. L. Patterson, hostess. Cov-cred-dish luncheon, 1:00 o'clock. Sunday Annual Get-Together Dinner. First Congregational Church. J. F. Tekenburg country home, Macleay Road. Cars will leav church af ter morning service. Miss Stella Gilmour and Arnujt Penrsnn O-tiiftlti . . . v 'Married in Salem Miss Stella Gilmour of Sllverton sinrl Mr Arena Prnrgnn nt HitrQnil. TXt, Washington were quietly mar ried in Salem Saturday, July 7th. with Rev. R. L. Payne, pastor of Uie First Baptist Church, officiating-. Mrs. Tearson Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merton M. Gilmour of Sllverton. She is a graduate of Mayton High School and also of the OrtEon Normal Srhnol Fnr ti t' past three years she has ti.nrht in Yamhill county. Mr. Pearson is the son of Mr. ;:r.! Mrs. I. x. Pearson of Willa- I i::ina. and is now employed in Os- II tr: nrii.r After a short wedding trip, the youuK oude will make their horr.f in Ktlso. Washington. II".:;.x.v,' If.1-..' . Ir. .., i,iurtary society Of Christian Church Will Med The Woman's Victims,!. oi - or the First Christian Church will mett at two-thirty o'clock 4his afternoon in iy.o vk Iors. Mrs. A. F. Noth's division will have charge of the program and Mrs. c. u. Reilly'8 division will h. hostess organization. Guests in Salem from London, England Mr. and Mrs. John Mitch! cf London. England, are the house guesis or Mrs. L. M. Scharff. 2037 -vgaska Avenue, for the week. Mr. and Mrs. Mitrhinen.. . ...v SIC UU la tour of the world. Thev win aii in Aueut from San Francis- Ajstraila and New Zeal.nH I m... . . i ..rs. Mitcmnson and m I pcfcarff spent their girlhood tc ijeiuer in mis country. Annual Get-Together Dinner Of First Congregational Church fcpXhe annual get-together dinner r the First Conrrosatin.i Church will be held Sunday at th ountry home of Mr. and Mrt. j -lexenDuxg on the llcCleav oad. Members are asked to bring thir basket dinners to church Sunday as cars will leave immedi ately after the morning service. Transportation will be available for all who wish to attend. Week-End Guests at E. T. Barkus Home Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Barkus had as their week-end guests, Mrs. Barkus' sister. Mrs. O. M. Holt, of Glendale, California, and also her cousins: Miss Leona Bestler, Mrs. Theodore Herzog and Miss Helen Horzog, all of Los Angeles. The group left Monday by motor for Tacoma. Ferndale, Seattle, and Vancouver, B. C. Motor to Newberg Tuesday Afternoon Mrs. John W. Orr and Miss Charlotte Orr motored to New berg Tuesday afternoon, returning late in the evening. Guests of Relatives in Portland Recently Mr. and Mrs. Al Krause and their son, Johnny, motored to Portland Sunday where they were the guests of Mrs. Krause's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. John Dellar; 21th Annual Reunion of Hanson-Stevens Clan The 37th annual reunion of the Hanson-Stevens clan will be held Sunday, July 16, at the State fairgrounds. gifU were presented the honor guest. '. Mrs. Edwin Armstrong and Mrs. Paulsen assisted Mrs. Rowland In serving a two-course luncheon late in the evening. In the guest group which Includ ed Intimate friends of Mrs. Mc Clintock, were Mrs. Karl Becke. Mrs. Howard Rex. Mrs. William Gosser, Mrs. Wayne Kaln of Los Angeles; Mrs. Earl Paulsen, Mrs. Oliver Jeesup, Mrs. Edwin Arm strong, Mrs. Ralph Olson. Mrs. Lawrence Imlah, Mrs. Willis Vin cent, and Mrs. Dolph Craig. Mr. and Mrs. East Have Guests from Long Beach Mr. and Mrs. S. S. East had as guests recently: Mr. and Mrs. P. N. Peterson and their three sons. Bart, Gordon and Kendall, of Long Beach, California. Mr. Peterson is connected with the Bank of Italy n Long Beach. The guests were delighted with Oregon. They visited Crater Lake and Klamath Falls enroute to Sa lem, and are continuing north to British Columbia with a short stop at Ranler National Park. Attends Meeting of Board of Children s Farm Home At Corvallis Mrs. C. P. Bishop attended the annual summer meeting of the board of the Children's Farm Home at Corvallis-Saturday. An interesting and complete report of the work done at the Home within the past year was given. Missionary from India Will Be Speaker at Meeting This A fternoon Miss Edna Holder, missionary from India will be the speaker at the joint meeting of the Home and Foreign .Missionary Societies of the First Methodist Church this afternoon at the home of Mrs. M. C. Flndley, 225 North 20 Street. Miss Holder, who is now on fur lough, has taught in the mission schools of India for the past seven years. All women interested axe invit ed to attend this meeting. Miss Kathryn Hartley Will Return Thursday rom The East Miss Kathryn Hartley, who has been in attendance at the national convention of Alpha Chi Omega sorority at Mackinac Island in Lake Michigan is expected to ar rive in Salem Thursday evening. Miss Hartley has visited rela tives and friends in Illinois, Ohio and Pennsylvania. She was a guest in Coeur d'Alene, Idaho yes terday. ' Mrs. Ingrey a Guest at H. R. White Home Mr. and Mrs. H. R. White have as their house guest this week, Mrs. H. L. Ingrey of Portland. Mrs. Ingrey formerly made her home In Salem. BELGIAN CHATEAU CAROL'S HOME K :;7v3w ' ' vii i ''""""'V I, - --r- ev;-v: .-. J..- Ik ' Unwelcome in his own land or in England. Prince Carol of Ru mania has retreated to Chateau d'Ardenne, in Belgium, with his mistress, Mme. Lupescu (inset). The old chateau, shown above, may become a place of exile Indefinitely for the youth who renounced tht Rumania throne, unless his activities cause Belgium, too, to request his departure. SYRIANS KILL AMERICAN Yankee Wife of C lerk at V. S. Consulate Shot Down FIRST GROUP GIRL El RES IVES AT CAMP Outing Site at Mehama Will Be Visited In Turn by Three Contingents The first group of Salem Girl Reserves left Monday afternoon for Camp Santaly at Mehama, where they will spend a week's outing. Thfs group will return to this city July 16, when another group will be taken to the sum mer camp. Altogether three groups wil attend camp this sum mer. Girls who are now at camp are: Elizabeth Abrame, Bettle Baker. Arpie Cos man, Wllla Ellis, Marie Graber. Martha Hammond, Iona Hanson. Margaret Hauser, Cather in Headrlck, Mary Francis Hen derson, Laura Hedine, June John son, Josephine Lewis, Helen Page, Marlon Ross. Ruth Sawyer, Alber ta Van Dabl and Mary Williams. The advisors for the group are Miss Elizabeth Baker, secretary of the YWCA. Miss Evelyn Sczuck. Salem teacher; Mre. Row ley, swimming Instructor at the YMCA. and Miss Eileen Moore, former student at Willamette uni versity. Cars for the trip were fur nished by J. W. Moore. Carl Glese, Mrs. O. H. Headrick, Beryl Holt. C. S. Hamilton and Dean Frank Erickson, of Willamette univer sity. A number of new donations to Camp Santaly have been made, as follows: supplies for a first aid kit. J. H. Willett of the Capital drug store; materials and install ing of a new sink, Neleon broth ers, plumbers, and Carl Giese; $5 toward a new lamp for the build ing. Past Matrons' order oj the Eastern Star. 1 Ladies' Aid and Missionary Society Will Meet This Afternoon The Ladies' Aid and Missionary Society of Leslie M. E. Church will meet in the church parlors at twelve o'clock today for a covered dish luncheon. The business meeting of the Aid Society will take place at one-thir ty and the Missionary Society will meet at three o'clock. Guest in Salem from Central Point Mrs. E. F. Ford and Dr. Estella Ford Warner have as their house guest. Miss Mildred Carlton of Central Point. Return from Extended Visit in H ashxngton Mrs. Frederick Deckebach and her small son, Frederick, Jr. re turned last week from an extend ed Mslt with Mrs. Deckebach's mother, Mrs. L. S. Robe. In Bur ton, Washington. Officers of United Artisans Will Be Installed at Open Meeting The public Is invited to attena the installation of officers of the United Artisans which will take place at eight-thirty o'clock to morrow evening at the Fraternal Temple. A business meeting at eight will precede the installation. A short program will be given later in the evening. Guest from California Complimented with Delight ful Bridge Party Complimenting Mrs. Alfred Mc- Clintock (Edna Ackerman) of Weed, California, who is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, John Ackerman, for the srummer, Mre. Reed Rowland entertained Friday evening in her home on Leslie Street with delightful bridge Prty. Mrs. Earl Paulsen won the high core prise. A number of lovely Miss Jane Addams Arrives On the Coast Enroute to Honolulu Miss Jane Addams, internation al president of the Women's In ternational League for Peace and Freedom arrived yesterday in San Francisco from Chicago. She will remain in California until July 28, when she sails for Honolulu to take part as honorary chairman in the women's pan-Pacific con ference and to preside at the world interim conference of the Women's International Leageu for Peace and Freedom. She will be accompanied on her trip by Miss Mary Rozer Smith of Chicago. Af ter a few days in San Francisco they will go to Carmel for a rest. Miss Addams will speak this ev ening in the Community theater of the Western Women's Club on "Next Steps Toward World Peace". She wil be the honor guest at a large dinner earlier in the evening. Mayor Rolph and other city of ficials together with prominent representatives of social welfare groups, women's clubs, and racial and international organizations greeted the distinguished visitor at the ferry building. BEIRUT, Syria, July 10. (AP) Kallil Saleeby and his American wife, who was a clerk in the Unit ed States consulate here, were as sassinated Saturday night on the street within a few yards Of their doorway. The policeman who pur sued the assassins also was killed. An investigation is being con ducted but its results haxe not been announced. The tragedy took place about 8 p. m. It is generally believed the mur ders were the result of a family feud and a dispute of villagers ov er water rights. The French and Syrian authorities are making ev ery effort to apprehend the as sassins. Mrs. Saleeby, although married to a Syrian, retained her Ameri can citizenship under the Cable law. She was formerly employed in the American consulate in Paris, where she met her husband, a Syrian artist. of Al Smith would be the begin ning of a nationwide campaign to elevate Catholics to the public of- i Looks as If the time was coming against religious worship. These whe ndelegate8 to a national con evils, as the minister terms them, i ventlon would be a corporal's would not result immediately ; guard beside the army of report- from Smith's election, but would ers. Boston Transcript. nevertheless be a far reaching re- Payne Declares Religion Will be Election Issue Not only prohibition, but Cath olicism also must be the Issues faced at the polls next November, declared Rev. R. L. Payne, supply pastor of the Fir6t Baptist church, in. his Sunday evening sermon. Reverend Payne insists election CARRANZA HOP PUT OFF y Viiim in 1L, Ask your grocer for new Crown Cak Floor. Pronounced bt by t ortmoit cater ers and cake bakers. suit of such a choice of the people. Reverend Payne came here from the middle west and himself says he is a reformed ku kluxer. The earthquake-stricken Bal kans are sending up a . cry for more clothes. That's what we also need. Atlanta Constitution. ay lipSS New or old large or small complete telephone sei le Is a neee rj convenience to every member of the family. Properly placed extension telephones save tiring step and valuable time or the housewife in answering and placing telephone calls- Son and daughter, sister and brother, dad and mother find them a year round comfort and satisfaction. And too, the telephone is an aid in emergencies and a protection in danger. Order your telephone or that step and time saving extension from our business office today. THE PACIFIC TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Postponement of Flight TUw k to Mexico Caused by Whid ROOSEVELT FIELD, N. Y., July 10. (AP) Adverse winds last night prevented Captain Emilio Carranza, Mexican good-will flier, from making a scheduled take-off for his return flight to Mexico City. He announced that he would attempt a take-off early tomorrow morning. New Terminal For The Popular SILVER GRAY MOTOR COACHES 185 N. HIGH Between State & Court HOURLY BERYICK TO PORTLAND FREQUENT SERVICE TO CORVALLIS, EU ? GENE, INDEPEN DENCE MON MOUTH Phone 36 Southern Pacific Money from Home Means more tGan tfiat sent from the follts at home. It means cash in large sums from the old homestead. All families outgrow their homes at some time or other and growing families are constantly looking for new homes. Our Want Ad columns are the means by. which many homes are bought ami sold. Prospective purchasers read our Want Ads because they know they will find the best in the shortest possible time. Dodge Brothers Standard Six Is the fastest car, with the fastest pick-up,under a thousand dollars. ffldDWEVIEIE That is only HALF the story. The IMPORTANT point is that this exceptional speed is made prac tical by Dodge ruggedness of chassis and body construction dPTrniriEms Might succeed in building a car at this price with equal SPEED, but to do so successfully they would also have to build a car with equal STURDINESS . . AFJHD That is where Dodge Brothers, with years of experience in build ing a dependable low-cost prod uct, are years ahead of the field. YdDHJ Can buy the Standard Six know ing that it is not only the fast est car in its class but the sturdiest and the one is every bit as important as the other COUPE F.O.B. DETROIT Is the price, and you will find our payment - plan one of the most liberal you have ever in vestigated. Drive the Standard without obligation today! Bonesteele Motor Co. 474 S. Commercial TELEPHONE 423 D OD 6 B ROTH ERS A Buy If There Ever Was One 4-DOO SXDAN 99CABUOIJT $4$DaXDXI SID AN t70 tl