.WIGS SET' Thm OUTGOIl STATESMAN. Salem Oregon. Wednesday Morning. September Z. 1342 Half Century Together I. Golden weddings are on , the calendar' for this weekend and the next. - : ; Mr. and" Mr. E. J. Sauter who have Jived in Salem and vicini ty since 1892, will celebrate their . golden wedding anniversary at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred . Ratzeburg on the Chemawa cam- i bus, on: Sunday September 6. A reception will be held at the Ratzeburg, home from 3 tq 8 o'clock, at which time the honor- '-. ed couple will greet their many i friends. Mrs. Sauter is a sister j cf Mr. Ratzeburg and Mrs. Alma I Henderson of Chemawa. " Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Gellatly c-f Corvallis will celebrate their ' 80th wedding, anniversary Sep-; tember 13, with a reception at ' the First Evangelical church in .' Corvallii Their friends are in- vlted, through the press and the - hours will be from 1:30 until . 4:30 o'clock. - ; Emma Taylor and William An drew Gellatly were married at Philomath. September 13, 892. They have been residents of Benton county since the ,1870's. : Their children are Mrs. W. W. " tarsen of Albany, Mrs. Oscar ' I. Paulson of Salem, Mrs. O. D. r .Dearborn of Ontario, Mrs. Ray " inend E. Banton of . Portland, Mrs. Stewart Palmer of Tacoma, . Ward Gellatly of Corvallis, Wil ; , liam J. Gellatly of Tacoma, and ' Harold Gellatly of Portland. . Plan Stay in . - f . Three Salem women are leav- Ing by train tonight for Camp Callan, near San Diego, to visit .their husbands, stationed there. Those making the trip are Mrs. Adam ' Deibert, Mrs. George Schweigert and Mrs. Lloyd Rein- wald. . n. s -: Mrs. Schweigert-; and Jr I. Reinwald ' plan a three week's -". stay, but -Mrs. - Deibert - will, re . main longer, visiting in Los An geles with Mrs. 'Joseph Cray croft, MissJoy Codley and Miss Lois Rulifson. " , Vr Rebekahs Have : , Salem Rebekah lodge held ; ts regular session M o n d a y with Mrs. Myrtle Walker, noblec grand, presiding. The lodge will ; not meet'next Monday,however." September 14, will be practice night for officers and the team. . Tit club r was announced . for .Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Donald Muellhaupt in Fer ry street This is to be initiation. UNIOXTALE Mrs. Carl Lso- nerS entertained with a family dinner Thursday, complimenting her two-year old granddaughter i Dianne Launer and her son-in-law, Walter Deibel, whose birth day was August 27. There were 13 members present - Miss Leone Spanlding, daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Spaulding is spending a few days visiting with Portland friends. Pattern r There's no age-limit to men! bership In the "slacks set." This , Anne Adams style, Pattern 4087 Is designed for" the mature fig- t , ure. . The short, or long-sleeved V jacket worn: outside, makes ', nice hideaway for hip sV The i slacks are cut for. flattery. ' T T Pattern 4087 : is available ' in '' i misses' and women's sizes 16, i8, v JO, 3I,33, 33, 40." 42 and 41 Faz 88 takes 5 ',4 yards 35 inch I fabric' -J,' f;""-, fend IS cents for this Anne Adams pattern. Write - plainly ; iz. nam, address and style nun.ber. - - i mrt! patrlotio wtth out rummer Pattern Book. Hera are fitrie-saviaf. distinctive Ityks tor every occasion; . every ara. And each, desif n is easy enough I t beeinnera. Send 10 cents for your copy I . " Send your e!er to The Orefon fUtesman. Pattern Department. fciUeia. Oregon. ; CLUB CALENDAR WEDNESDAY . Knight Memorial Ladies -circle, with Mrs. B. E. Edwards. 131 Stat street; 13 JO basket lunch. THURSDAY ... Executive - board WSCS. 1st Methodist church, with Mrs. Ted UUakka. 1756 Court street. 2 pjn. raroAT VTW" Red Cross sewlnf, 141 South High street, - p. m, -' - Party'Giveh- Mtyrays , " 1 " Neighbors gave a farewell par ty'Triday for Mr.r and Mrs. Roy Murray and family, who are leaving for Tillamook to "make; their home. . ," I Those present were Mr. and Mrs. Harry Backle and son Jer- -ry, Mr. and Mrs. George CarrolL , daughter, Helen, Mrs. Christena . Newburgh, Mrs. B. Beamish and Mr. Robert Hemming. : ; Silverton At a' pretty home wedding solemnized at 1:30 Sun--day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Barr of Suverton, . Mrs.' Nellie Northrop, sister of Mrs. Barr, and Mr. Elmer Brown were united in marriage with the Rev. Leonard Jones of McMinnville reading the . ceremony. Mrs. Northrop recently " came ' west from Nielsville, Wisconsin." ; The Barr house, was attractive ly decorated with gladioluses and asters. The bride, Wearing navy blue and gold, . carried ", white gladioluses, while her sister, Mrs. "Van Langford of Portland' as matron of honor wore navy blue and silver, and Mrs. Barr, her other attendant, a lighter shade of blue. Both the attendants car ried peach gladioluses. ; Mr. Barr was best man for Mr. t Brown- and 'Mr. Langford was usher. ; Mr.; Robert ' Hannah of Portland gave the bride in mar riage. Mrs. Alfred Johnson, niece of the' bride, played the wedding music. ; Following the ceremony, a din ner was served at a table cent ered by a tall , white ; wedding cake. White tapers and pink and white : snapdragons . completed the decorations. ' . -. -, Mrs. Frank : Hubbs and Mrs, Alfred Johnson, assisted by Miss Jacqueline Peltier and Miss Bon nie Smith of . Portland were , in charge of the dining room. -1 Guests were Mr. and" Mrs. The Women She Has Young . By ADELAIDE KERR -v Wide World Features Writer Washington keeps hearing, that Franklin Roosevelt wants to give Florence Harriman another Mrs. Harriman says, when anything about it.H - " Another, big job for Florence impressive list -.ending with' 937-40." Since then she hasn't wasted time as a grandmother past 70. oday she. is chairman - of the Washington branch of the Nation al ' Russian Relief and chairman of the American Friends of Nor way. She shuttles back and forth between Washington, New York and the house where she has sum mered in Rye:. NY, working .to raise $100,000 ,for each Besides that she is chairman of the Am erican section of the Internation al Free World association, formed "to defeat -the axis powers and work for. a world order based on freedom democracy and justice."- When that doesn't keep her busy she whips out. on a lecture tour. Last winter - in Minnesota, her bus stuck tight in a snowbank. While the rest of the passengers settled 'back in disgust to wait Mrs. Harriman climbed out and began a five - mile walk ' to the town where she was to lecture at three. . - ? "The women of the west are. surprisingly wide" awake," .she . said. Those women are simply; marvelous." They educate them-, selves continually' and are moat eager to de something construe- tive In the war effort..'. t "There's a lot. of : 'work . for -women past Ml te do and It's net . .necessary to get lnto'vnlform er ran te Washington i de-." Mrs. Harriman's, hair has been white for a good many years, but her back is still straight as a rod heritage of her little . girl, days when her father made her walk With a book on top of her. head half an hour every, day. " . i "After, her" New. York debut, at Delmonico's , and her marriage; to Banker J. Borden flarriman,' she might have concentrated on the Park Avenue whirl.. Instead she besan reading social problems and before long was. ?up" to her eyesT in, work. She , formed ".the, first women's organization active in a political campaign -when Wilson ran for the Presidency in 1912, was a strong advocate ' for the League of Nations, later was dem ocratic cemmitteewoman from the District of Columbia and then of ficial hostess for the democratic c o n v e n t ion at Philadelphia in 1S3S. society MUSIC The DCIIE Langford of Portland, Robert J. Hannah, Miss Mildred Myers of Portland; Mrs. John Richardson ' of Wisconsin; Mr. and Mrs. Ed . Sischo of Mehama, Mrs. Sarah ' Chase of McMinnville, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Miller of McMinn ; ville; Mr. and Mrs, Glen Peltier of Portland, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Johnson,' George - and Richard Johnson. -Weavers Will Meet -Tonight - Members of the Salem Weav ing guild are being called to a meeting tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the .YWCA. . This is the. f i r s t meeting of, the fall season. Several important pieces of Dustiness will be .transacted. A question of : doing Red Cross work will be discussed. j. Mrs. Robert White has left for . St : Louis,;. Missouri - to visit her husband'who is stationed at Jef v ferson barracks. She-will remain for several - weeks, - while Mr. White attends drill school.. instruction 'Today's Menu '".Let's substitute rice for pota toes and meat today and have this menu for dinner: " . : Beet and carrot salad v " . . Rice frontier . . Buttered spinach " f ' Peach pie -rr. "RICE FRONTIER (Meat Substitute) " 3 tablespoons butter 4 tablespoons flour . 2 cups tomatoes v .. ' Vie teaspoon salt , ' ' " ' ; teaspoon pepper . .. 1 , teaspoon' sugar .' 2 tablespoons chopped onions '.' .2 tablespoons chopped green Jl . peppers ' . . . 3 cups cooked rice , cup' diced bread cubes i cup grated or finely sliced " " cheese . Melt butter and add flour. Mix well4 and. add tomatoes and sea sonings. " Cook . slowly, stirring constantly,' until thick and very . Pour into' buttered shallow bak- . mg cusnana. sprimue witn cheese! Bake 23 minutes in mod erately hot oven (375). Ideas big job. , you ask her: .. "I haven t heard V. V - - " , Harriman would top a mighty ."American Minister to Norway A year later she -went to Nor- L way as minister, and. the Job she did got. a lot of applause When ft I t.-? FLORENCE HARRIMAN .. v. ... ) . T . , the Nazis invaded the country she followed the government north. but not until she had sent the first message the White House received reporting the invasion. ; She. hates the phrase "woman ;f "Tea" dent sy;. maB ipi tut' ar ini- 1 a w y e r, i the aays. .",Beeanse- a woman la a woman is reason why she shottli not make a good diplo mat. There , are women whe make excellent diplomats hist as -there are men who don't. A woman has a keen Instinct of what te da at a given moment And she ought to be more tact ful than a man because so much ef her life Is spent in using tact . r i '. XJ T If: . Monument Is Erected at Pioneer Grave A grey granite monument bear ing simply the names and, dates of I their births and death; but mark ing for generations to come the final resting place of Judge and Mrs. J. Qulnn Thornton, was placed recently in Lee ' Mission cemetery as a tribute from .Dr. Ellen Chamberlin of Salem. , . To 93-year-old-' Miss Chamber lin, oldest living graduate of WU lamette university and former in structor at that institution,' from which she last spring received an honorary, doctorate, - the .severely simple granite is not only a con tribution : to history. J. - Qui nn Thornton's 'name, looms large in the story of , pioneer Oregon,' but the friendship the early state su preme court justice and his wife bqre to bier own parents is equally , important to the donon W 1: ; - Judge Thornton,,- appointed . to Oregon's supreme court bench in 1847, a year after his arrival here; was shortly - sent r to , Washington to urge formation of - a territorial government : He was author, .ton, of tributes to' the country's scen ery and of a two-volume - work "Oregon and California i in ; 1848. Mrs. Thornton' receives ' small mention In Oregon histories but friends of arly days in Salem re call that she wrote well and that her skill was often used .in prep aration of the tributes ' published as parts of .' obituaries. Such a tribute she wrote when the moth er of Miss Chamberlin and Mrs. Charles Weller died, 'the sisters recall -. , . -- - - Engraving4 On the . monument, northeast of the mission plot, was arranged by; Mrs.;' Jessie M. Cros-san,- foster daughter of the Thorn tons." Small wooden' markers such ti were commonly in tise when Judge, and Mrs. Thornton died in 1888 and ,1889 were replaced by the new stone. At .StockaTrd PORTLAND, Ore., Sept. l-VP) Portland's - union .stockyards bulged with beef on the hoof Tues day as civilians braced themselves for meat rationing. ; - 't v Harry H. Burdick, president of the yards,, reported- today that a 19-year-old delivery record fell Monday as 4172 cattle arrived. The previous record of 4142 had stood since October 8, 1923. Burdick said the volume of cat tle being handled by the yards was so great that he was seeking prior ity rating for an expansion to cost between $40,000 and $50,000. Trailer Unit Open PORTLAND, Sept-federally-sponsored trailer' camp, expected to total 100 units by Sep tember 15, opened Tuesday to house workers at the Aluminum Company of America's Troutdale plant, whose production has "been impaired by labor shortages. Pick-Up Work T)res up your xhair or dayen port in ' exquisite flower, lace crocheted" by you in your spare i time! Do; it in,Stripsy-five -lor m f davenport backv three fora chair ' back; Quickly memorized! . Pair . tern 251 contains directions lor ' making set; illustrations- of it and stitches, materials required. Send eleven cents for this pat tern to The Oregon Statesman. Needlecraf t Dept. .Salem.' Write plainly .pattern number, . your name and address. '-., -V:'--;C? - Te r&Sm C3nu at K-LY 'Wnkham'a Compound TABLETS wlU dded lroo) bate helped tKoumU to reUcre periodic pain with veak, nerroua. blue Xeel lnmdue to tuncuoni monthly ejj.turb.nces. Also, tbelr Iron makes tbem a fine bematle tonic to help buUd up red blood. Plnkbam's Tab lets are made epeetaUy for women aroiiow iaoet curecuona. Delivery Hug ioV? ?iffjct a WCTU Endorses 'Green Oregon' . The "Keep Oregon Green for Victory and for Future Genera tions'' resolution was adopted at this week's meeting by Salem Central WCTU, of which Mrs. Hel en Prescott is president The WCTU group, with 90 members, enthusiastically endorsed the state- Wide program designed to prevent FOR CUOOGn ARf.lGTROClG'O FAMOOO 12 FOOT FLOOR COVEHINO jr r 1 t I . - . .J. . . .s -,v I .- I j-" t ' - ''."V v'w I . Vtii' - 1 So radio i "Tkeolra ! i -- ARMSTRONG-QUAKER - Vi fftiTimi' "n "'VVV" Taey an reeegwhed everywhafo os Hio leaders . . : Buy Quaker and ; ' YouGettheEESTI . ICvj:" ,0 Shh , " onolonfer service hi Nmm r j," .-'"! f -': ' - . . IH i gjtlm - 12 FOOT WIDTHS, ; V tfCffi'X : :'-znixm$i styles. ; :Aidtniouo Sll ? ; I ' , - '. "Moo ;. . owsrss. - txire: : - ? -j ' V " 1 ' lervko. Tkore's better - . f Cl A l 'v ' " a eyekei " Omfy saewissj floer coveriwa 2 tt. wMsl j;J rVw. f Z Qeefcer era stykd by Ameriee't ioaolaa de stfnen. Yea get o blf colon oa4 oty)9 - r -9 ;otup.ihi i I : I,' PVT ' M ; HOfclZS WE'RE f j r Wv?? - FIGHTING FOR'.' : ? v f t&fa . :- k : .... '. .:.- - , .;.-..;! f " i ,f v i - .: Abf.iSTnotio-QUAitnni buo :- '':. : . v :P'nio'xi2 --l y.-hz r- t ' ' I CUY WAR 5TAf.PS AT 135 X. Liberty rhonellJI forest . fires and to educate the public as to the importance of this effort and the ways in. which to make it effective. Killed by Truck CORVALLIS, Sept HflWohn Bergen of Portland was fatally in jured by a truck at Camp Adair Monday. He died shortly before Mrs. Bergen arrived at the hos pital. ' . SEAMLESS . j4 V5 & FOR THOSE od wide Contracts Awarded On Flight Strips The state highway commission Tuesday announced : that it had awarded contracts for the, con struction of two airplane land ing fields -or flight strips in 'east ern Oregon to C A. Dunn, on a bid of $406,000. .Work of the projects win get under way within the next few MO There's no need to put vp with a floor that's a PATCHWORK OP SEAMS, when you can cover any room vp to 12ieet wide and any length with famous Armstrong Quaker floor covering. Wards broad assortment includes the? smartest new designs and newest Ideas In decoration! Mable, floral and. tile patterns that are waterproof and ttoinproofl SEE THIS FEATURE VALUE NOW AT WARDS! V7UO IVAHT THE FINES:TTQ1JAL.TY TWe or AmsJrorrj Quaker fugs for every Ceemfa YOUZ HOMI Thousands cf women are now dressing vp their homes with those vary1 v.! smartwashable yet toxpensive smoolVsurfoee rugs. .-You ay choose from d fascinating array of sofsry-colored ftorafriarbleized ; bright tie patterns. COME TO WARDS NOW and se fed from a range, of sizes! weeks. Both landing fields wcr approved by .'army officials.; ? -. Gridstera on Force. f ' PORTLAND, Sept l-(-Port.-land'j police departmentjwas bol stered Tuesday by two ex-Oregoaf State football players Leonard1 Younce and Joseph Wendlkk. They were sworn in as temporary members of the force. N TGOMER Y 7ARD DESLGN0 FLOORS Seecf fbofvoayov WfTOI -.