n OSEGON STATESMAN. Sokm. Oragox. Sunday Morning. Inn 15. fag: nvs The new class schedules for , this summer may be secured by the Salem Art Center. Twenty- , seven classes and workshops have been planned, with weav ing and painting startipg Mon day. . i ; An innovation is the new class ,; in mosaics, under the direction . of George Blais and Virginia ''; Darce. The latter was designer , -lor some of the mosaics at the Timberline Lodge, and is now with the Oregon WPA art pro- -ject in Portland. She comes to ! Salem every Tuesday and Thursday to instruct. r On Thursday afternoon, Miss: Darce, Mr. Blais, and Miss Isa belle Schmierer will sponsor a iif&S for both professionals and teurs in outdoor sketching. AirTnterested are invited t at tend. Each tour will close with an open forum discussion of the various problems. The pottery department for the summer will be under the direction of Miss Schmierer who has just returned from a year's work at the University ; of Ore- , gon. She has planned a close se- ' quence of progressive problems , in ceramics and will develop a number of experiments with un usual glazes. .-. Mr. Blais will continue class es In sculpture. At present, be is conducting a class in sculpture in the grade and junior high school department at the daily vacation Bible school at Jason Lee church. Throughout the summer he will give instruction in ceramic and wood sculpture at the Art center. Mae Gingrich, who has been an instructor at the Salem Art Center for three years, will con tinue classes in painting for children. She is also conducting classes in grade and junior high 'school art work at the Jason Lee : church. Her classes have been popular, for she reports an en rollment of 80 varying in ages--from the first grade' of school through junior high school. Mrs. Gingrich and the children in her classes are planning to make a ! large screen for future use in the church school, and many relig ious paintings. An exhibition is to be held the last day of the school, when each child will have his own work presented as a gift to the church. Special attention is called to the fact that there Will be a change in the gallery hour schedule. On Mondays, the gal leries open at 1 p. m. On Tues d a y s, Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays, they open at . 1& m. The galleries will close at 5:30 and reopen at 7, closing at 930, with the exception of Fri days when the galleries close for the week at 5:30 p. m. No visit ors will be received and no classes Iheld on Saturdays and Sundays. 1 For those . who nave failed to. see the Cam! fennan exhibit of oil paintings, they may see them for three more days, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday. This exhibit has been attracting many visitors for the past two weeks. Woodburn Girl To Wed WOODBURN Miss Opal Hasenyager, daughter- of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Hasenyager, and . Kenneth A. Brown, son ot Mr. ' and Mrs. Sam Brown of Ger vais, will be married at S o'clock Wednesday night in the fire place room of the FlrsJ Presby terian church of Salem. Rev.'W. Irwin Williams will officiate. - Miss Agnes Monson of Salem will act as bridesmaid. Sam E. Brown, the bridegroom's broth er, will be best man. Following the ceremony there will be a reception at the notne of the bride's parents in Wood burn. . ' Mr. and Mrs. Cart Porter have left for California where they will sojourn in Los Angeles,' Hollywood and San' Francisco for several weeks. Dr. and Mrs. Charles -Campbell and their children have re turned from a plane trip to Chi cago, Ohio jind. Indiana. blip uovers on Summer List t at MDLOpIMM of Salem Women of Sajem and Willamette Valley have been waiting for this Sale. Come and see. You will not be disappointed. With the arrival of spring, home-loving women want to brighten up their homes with fresh gay slipcovers which, be sides giving cheerfulness and cool comfort, protect the uphol stery. . ., The Cotton Textile institute makes the following suggestions for slipcover shoppers: Make certain the fabric is sanforized so slipcovers can be washed without changing size appreciably after laundering. Note the amount of residual shrinkage to be allowed for Inquire if both fabric and trimming are color-fast to wa ter and sunlight. Nearly all bet ter-grade cottons are. Tightly woven fabrics, such as sailcloth, chintz, sateen and cot ton twill, are strong and there fore more serviceable and pro tectice against dust Loose fancy weaves,, allow dust to pass , through, catch easily, and per mit seams to pull out. Perman ent finishes on organdie, chintz and sateen assure a, fine finish after laundering. '.': If buying ready-made slipcov ers, . examine their construction carefully. They should , fit smoothly, but not tightly, in or ' der to allow for a slight shrink age in first washing. Seams should be caught deep enough to hold, edges well finished and the bindings caught on both the right and Wrong sides. Slide fasteners with fast-col ored tapes give the"best fit for closures and are well worth the cost. If planning to make slipcov ers, take careful measurements and allow for centering floral motifs and stripes, and matching plaids and patterned designs where the parts meet Mr. and Mrs. Homer Carpen ter and Miss Martha Carpenter were among those attending the j rose festival parade in Portland on Friday. Mrs. David Ettas and her daughter, Mary, plan to leave on Monday for the Oregon beaches where they will sojourn for a week. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fisher and their son and daughter-in-law. i Mr. and Mrs. Edward Fisher, are spending the weekend aLNesko- win. Mr. and Mrs. Chandler Brawn and daughters, Plum and Rox- anne, are vacationing at their summer place at Seal Rocks this month. Welcomed as new Salem res idents are Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Linsted and their two sons of Portland. . . - LEBANON Mare than 1M descendants of. Isaac, John, Fletcher, Jobe and Mprton Crab- tree, who settled in this neigh borhood in 1845-46-47 and who gave their name to the little village of Crabtree, met for their annual reunion in Bryant park Sunday, June 8. Nellie Young Butler is president of the clan and Robert Summers of Marsh- field is secretary." Relatives came from Lebanon, Albany, Sweet Home, Scio, Crabtree, Tangent, Hubbard, Clackamas. WUlamina, Eugene, Portland, Maupin, Red mond, Marshfield, North Bend, Spokane and Centralia. SCIO The marriage of James Cameron and Evelyn Tangent, of Portland, will be in July. The groom-elect,' a son of Mrs. George Gay of Albany, former ly lived in Scio. He is studying for the ministry. Monitor Folic On Journeys stopped at Minot to visit relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Sether returned from ' their honeymoon and reception was' held. Many pretty and useful gifts were re- MONITOIt Mr. and Mrs. Gil-1 ceived. bert Newman and children Julia and John returned Saturday from two-weeks trip. They 1 went through Wallowa and Joseph, where they visited Victor and Harry Newman.. They stopped at St Marie, Idaho, .where they vis ited Mrs. Newman's two sisters. Returning with, the ; Newmans were their two nieces, Vivian and Dortha Hana, to spend the summer here. A son, Arvid Leon, was born to Mr. and Mrs. Allen Krapf at the Silverton hospital Monday. It is Mr. and Mrs. " Nofr- Yoder's first grandchild. .Mrs. Millard' Clinton returned Saturday from a trip to Bemidge, Minn., to visit her folks. She 'also visited relatives at Devil's Lake, N. D. She stopped at Kenmore to visit her old home and she Miss Alice Penny went to the Silverton hospital because of blood poison in her hand. , Wflmot Harrison returned home from - the Oregon City hospital after recovering from the ampu tation of his leg. ' Charles Varies left tor Milton- Freewater this week' to work in canneries and harvest fields. Three Licenses Given DALLAS Mir riage licens es have been issued in the office ot County Clerk Carl S. Graves to Wilbur O. Brinkert, Rickreall and Bertha A. Crowley, Rickreall; to Maxey M. Larigford, West Sa lem and Florence M. Pierce Sa lem; Ingvar B. Lambert ot Val setz and 'Maxine A. Rowell of Dallas. - ... Dallas Girl oii Eastern Trip; DALLAS Mary Ellen Dal ton, daughter, of Mr. . and Mrs. E. V. Walton of Dallas, left Thursday night for the national biennial convention of the Alpha Gamma Delta sorority to be held in Ashe- ville, N. C Miss Dalton is a dele gate of Phi chapter , at Oregon State' college.' She will also visit relatives and friends in several other cities and will be away tor about two months. , .-1 -, En route she will visit her sis ter and family, Mrs. Cleo Mueller in California. Miss Dalton then plans to at tend a wedding of sorority sis ter at Selma. Ala- where she will act as bridesmaid. From there, she will go to the conven tion at Asheville which will be held at Grove Park Inn. . Following the convention she will go to Washington, DC, New York city and then U Rocheitay NY,; to visit relative Sho plana to spend two weeks at an Alpha Gamma Delta camp at Welland, Ontario and Two weeks at ft init lar camp at Jackson, Mich. After' a trip to Chicago and St Paw she will come home by the Cans dlan Pacific. ; . , J . ' Attend Council MT. ANGEL A group of local Legionnaires and auxiliary , at tended the Marion county, coun cil at Salem Thursday night. Those making the trip were Mr. and Mrs. Peter Gores, Mr. and Mrs, Fred Lucht, Jr, Mr. and. Mrs. Fred Prosser, Miss Georgia Webb. Mrs. Hae Heggie, fir. and Mrs. Albert Lenaers and Mr. an Mrs. Tony Traeger. Reports will be given- at r the next post and unit meetings at the local Memorial halt SoTorol . . Value to $59.50. Only $19.00 and $2X03 One Group $15 P (nl A 1 Values to $29.50 Your Choice $1 1 I PHOENIX HOSE All Wanted - SKadti 66c Two Women Win Cash Awards WOODBURN One Woodburn woman won $10 and a Portland woman won $75 in a recent Spre- ! kles "pick a pie" contest. W. A. Bishee of Portland, representing the company was in Woodburn Monday and presented a $10 check to Mrs. Max Laubsch of 1038 Blaine street She entered the contest through the Enos and Hammett grocery. Mrs. Harry Baldwin of Port land, who won the $75, entered through - her father's store in Woodburn, the Chenowitb groce- FJmer B. Olson has returned from Minnesota, where he went to put in the crops on his farm. W. Earl Dunn, real estate deal er who has his headquarters on the highway hear the intersection of Hardcastel avenue, was injur ed last Friday morning when a gopher gun he was adjusting was accidentally discharged. Nelson Is Home From Hospital SILVERTON HILLS E. O.l Nelson, who has been critically ill at the Silverton hospital, has recovered sufficiently to be mov-1 SumiM Sheers 1.95 2.95 3.95 to 6.50 Court " WT JilJVJLi m cd to hii home here. He is getting along as well as could be expected now. The Silverton Hills grange is planning a program in honor of I Father's day. the program to be given on June 20, with Eldon Mulkey Frank Porter and. Virgil Tschantz in charge. Silverton Ilills grangers and their families plan to picnic at Hazel Green park on June 29. Besides the picnic dinner, sports A AT - : ( ) ' because you save money! Today fur prices are definitely ftt their lowest point! i. ' - ' j . ; because you get first choice of the new o 1941-1912 fur fashions! because you can have your coat all paid ' for by the time Winter rolls around! Days On MONDAY. TUESDAY. WEDNESDAY A Leading New York Fur Stylist Will Be Here to Help You Choose -Jr J 1 rtU CttttV" ne plus shatj and B-- 7 P-eottt 155 N. Likcrlr Phone 3191 7 will occupy the afternoon.