PAGE TWO-SECTIOII "1 That OUCGOII STATESMAN. Salem. Oregon, Sunday Morning. July L 1345 t ii 1 ' It. I 1 i X :' i 3 i ..i Visitors to Be Guests At Picnic j Mrs. James H. Nicholson, Jr. and Miss Dorothy Hardie have Invited guests to a picnic this afternoon at the - home of the former's brother-in-law and sis ter, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Ham ilton, on Glen Creek drive.5 The affair is being arranged in compliment to Mr. and Mrs. Ro bert Pickens (Mary Yeager), who arrived last week from their home in Philadelphia for a visit with their parents. They were accompanied by their son, Rob ert, jr. ! : A group of the honor guests friends have been invited to come at 2 o'clock and the affair . will be held in the garden. Joanne Cooley Has Birthday Mr. and Mrs. Byron Cooley entertained at their home on North 16th street Monday night, honoring their daughter, Joanne on her first birthday. After - an Informal evening out-of-doors, refreshment were served. Guests included Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Cooley, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Rulifson, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Cooley, Loren andGary, Mr. and Mrs. Leon Cooley and Cheryl, Mr. and Mrs. ! Orval Cooley-and - Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ross, Stephen and Jimmy, Mrs. j Willard Gritton, Mrs. Glenn Baillie, Mrs. Adam Deibert, Diane and Joanne Coo- ' ley. ... . ;.- .- . t- In observanc of Gershwin Jubilee week. Dr. Frank Black has arranged a concert for th NBC orchestra this afternoon which Includes "Porgy and Bess" . orchestrated for sym phony by Robert Russell Ben nett. Rodzinski, will conduct the New York vMlharmonic sym- ' phony orchestra in a "Request of the Troops" program. ; Today's list of Jetter pro grams includes! :-.'' 11:00 (CBS) the Stradivari or chestra under the direction of Paifl Lavalla Includes the fol lowing on its 4 program: Danca of the Buffoons" by Ritnsky Korsakoffv rTwo tt e a r t s in Threeiuarter Time, S t o 1 1 z, sextet from "Lucia di Lammer moor by Donizetti, "Love, Your Magic Spell Is Everywhere", by Goukfing and "Open Thy Heart" by Bizet-' ' S .;: . 4 1 1:30 (NBC) - John Charles Thomas will siog "Ode to -the Fourth- of July.t -Mr Old Ken tucky Home" and with the chor us. "Flag of Our Union." , Orchestra and chorus numbers complete the half -hour program. ! 12:00 (CBS) the "Request to the- troops" concert, played by the New-York Philharmonic symphony under-the direction of ' Artur Rodzinski includes i num bers asked for b; - the men over seas. The numbers are "Eine Kleine Nachtmuaik" by Mozart, overture to "Dlej Meistersinger" by : Wagner and j Tchaikow&ky's symphony in E minor No. 5. 2:00 (NBC) Dr. Frank Black V will direct the NBC orchestra in "the symphonic sketch of "Porgy and Bess," the overture to "The Jtfaid and the Thief by Men otti and "Lincoln Portrait" by Copland. j 6:30 (NBC) "The American Album of Familiar Music" in cludes the music pf Kern, Rom berg, Kriesler and) Massenet. The Star Theatre on CBS Is doing its summer series. '7.-00 (NBC) The aU-girl hour lists "Yankee Doodle," a George M. Cohan medley, "Deep Riv er," "Oh Susanna! and "Amer-i tea the Beautiful" on its pro-i gram of enduring! favorites. j Monday, Igor Gorin will sing; - on thaj Firestone program onJ NBC at 9:30 and Bing Crosby will take a place' on the Tele-i phone Hour's "Great Artist" aer-j Ies A group of j favorite "radio ; singers , are listed on the pro cram of the Carnation hour at : T, also on NBC . : There is no substitute for food eyesight jit is the keystone of your success and your enjoyment of life. Dont "take chances' with anything so pre cioua. At the slightest . suspicion of trouble . . IIAVe YC'J.l EYES exi::::3 Dr. JTorry A. prowa Optemetrist mmm lit NV Liberty L ! Ijlrs. vj. Herbert omitti, wno ls ieavina toaay ior wit- i lingbura, Xenn., to attend the annual meeting of the Pi 1 Beta Phi ttlement school committee. Mrs. Smith was ! recently j' appointed a new member of the committee by 1 the grand council -and will serve for five years. She is ; one of five Pi Beta Phis who serve on the adnunlstrative jj board of the school. Mrs. Smith will be ejecompanied east by her mother, Mrs. H. H. Brooks, who will return to her 1 home in Greencasile, Indiana, after a four months stay hi ! " Salem. Mrs. Smito will be in Gatlinburg for two weeks. She will visit in lrKlianapolis and Greencasile before re turning home the: Jirst of August (Kennell-Hlis). imist Installation Wednesday . Third annual installation and initiauon dinner for Salem soroptimists, classified women's, service club, was that held Wed nesday night in the banquet room of the Golden Pheasant. Mrs. Belle Niles Brown, retir ing president and new member of the board, served as installing officer, issuing the charge to Winifred Pettyjohn, Vice-President Marie Ling.- Secretary Jewell Allen, Corresponding Secretary Hattie Bratzel and Treasurer Grace Taylor Mrs. F. Ethel Lau was in charge of the installation. Mrs. May Thorgeson Piper, Miss Lena Blum, Miss Irene De Lisle, Mrs. Kathryn Loaiza and Mrs. Bessie Kayser were, wel comed into membership of j the clubj which has received 18 new members during .the club .year just closed. Tables for the occasion were decorated in the colors of the international : organization, blue delphinium and gold gladioluses, with candles in blue and gold. They were arranged under direc tion of Mrs.1 Paul Heau a mem ber of the Salem club. r Portland Soroptimists here for the occasion were Mrs. Alice Dowell Jones, retiring president of the Portland club; Mrs. Har riett Sheas green and Mrs. Har riet Krause, northwest regional representatives, and Mrs. Emily Eisenhower. Other guests were Mrs. Albert Robinson of Seattle and Miss Bessie Foley of San Mateo, Calif. Reports from committee chair men on the year's work .Indi cated that number one project for the club has. been Hillcrest school, which received gifts of draperies for B cottage recreation A DaDARRY SUCCESS, COURSE "Mirror-cle'? ji ' J Right in Your Own Homer All this week, a beauty consultant from the Richard Hudnut Salon, New York, will be in our Toilet Goods Section. She comes to help you with your personal beauty problems, show you how yoo can improve yourself in face, figure and fitness through the Du Barry Success Course and our (Du Barry Beauty Preparations. It cn happen to jou! WTLLETTS Corner State Liberty i 'MM 4 V if i t 1 K i rooms and -reference books, to gether with: small gifts for girl pupils on j such occasions as Christmas and Easter. The club' has also provide a fund for between-class luncheons fori a group of girls at Leslie junior high school, an educational ; ex periment which paid in better work by pupils who had not re ceived proper nourishment from the usual three meals a day. In addition, Soroptimists have con tributed toward a wheelchair gift for Beth Sellwood, president of the active Chin-Up club of Ore gon, and to funds to aid Euro pean Soroptimists, and have done a variety of war work athome; Family Here on Summer In Salem ion an extended visit here are relatives of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Baldwin, who will cel ebrate theirj 64th wedding anni versary and Mr. Baldwin's 85th birthday. J rH ' ;i . The visitors are the Baldwin's son-in-law and daughter. Mr. and Mrs. E. Hugh Cravens and fatn ily Miss Jane Cravens and Mrs. Wayne DeCapito, daughters and Richard Cravens, a son, who" is enrolled in Willamette. Also here are Miss Georgia Baldwin and the Cravens' granddaughter San dra Jane DeCapito, all of Excel sion Springs, Mo, and Mrs. P. H. Petrce of Lawrence, Kan, a sis ter, of Mr. Baldwin who attend ed the wedding in 1881. ; The Cravens planned the trip and family reunion, hut were obliged to postpone it because of the outbreak of war. Mr. Cravens is the head j of the home service department sof the Clay county Red Cross 'and - executive vice president of the Clay County state bank. Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Caplello are the parents of a son, Michael James., The father is in the navy overseas. The mother is the for mer Lila Warthen of Aumsville. ' tx f DmBsttj Fsct Ptvdtr with SMJ VuBsTTj fMtcUst tbit Wttk ! - t rhena Silt EuL . funny how meeting friends you haven't seen for yean gives you on of two reactions. - Either you feel very young, or you feel very old. Frankly we seldom feel our cpj& until we try to play games at pio--j nicsj . 1 ' i Chang ol tune,, Now, according to all indications "Juna is Bursting Out All Over" will hove to give way to "Ode to Iulyt and "Yankee Doodle." Isn't It lucky that j months dont last more else we radio listeners wouldn't get any variety at all. r . ; used to sit right at home ana see ine sty . . News Item. Remember Thursday? rockets roman candles and the pin wheels We pote by a news item that a' woman was - and how, the dog always put his tail be- troated by first aid that day. after becoming 1 - tween his leas and hid? j f ' . ! 111 from exposure to the sun. Pi Beta Phi Settlement School Of interest to Pi BeU Phi fra ternity! members is the announce ment of the appointment of Mrs. G. Herbert Smith, as a member of the! mittee.! SetUement school com- I ' ! - ,- :- ' -iV The Pi Beta Phi Settlement school. at Gatlinburg, Tenn, was established in 1912 as a memor ial to founders of the fraternity. The school is located in an isola . ted mountain community. Pi Beta Phi fufst built a grade school, then a (high school, a health cen ter, and undertook the training of the idults in S handicraft pro gram t revive and improve their old skll in weaving, furniture making, carving and broom mak ing - :.) - f .' i! . Alumnae clubs have provided -a market tor these handicrafts, and have returned thousands ' of dollars to the citizens of the Gat linburg! community. Weaving is taught to the three upper high school classes and is also done by the women in their homes, under supervision. J. ' " I ! This free school is the only school in the immediate commun ity. List year 386 pupils were enrolled. At present the county is. providing the basic education al program in the school, with Pi Beta Phi furnishing buildings and equipment, teachers for mu sic, physical education and! voca tional training and maintaining entirely the health center. The school receives appropriations from Smith-Hughes, county and state education funds. The re maining expenses are paid from fraternity sources. Newlyweds Feted, Shower Mr. and Mrs. Gernand Jones (formerly Daisy Tooley) whose marriage was; an event of June 14, was honored with a miscel laneous shower Monday,; June 25 when the pastor. Rev.: Alma Rippound - and j congregation of upper room assembly entertainj ed for the recently married cou Ple. : f - '-I-1 . : ' 'i j Rev. ! Alma Rippand and chil dren. Opal, Donald and Marie played guitars and sang. Roses were arranged about the rooms and centered the table on which the gifts were placed. The nevr V- i rHABEKJASHSi t OR WOMEN 115 NORTH LIBERTY 3e4duid-to-your-husbcmd' i week.,., is being contemplated, we i are told. It seems some women feel that men deserve a vacation from housework, and that they intend to see mat they get it! It might be a gracious . gesture to buy the boys a new shiny dlshpan or have the vacuum sweeper done over. . , .. ' -..j.. , Bsmunbsr when . they used to have Jfreworks on the parking strips along Court street and on the courthouse lawn? And we than a month, i ! CLUB CALEKDAB l MONDAY ' 1 L United Spanish War Veterans ; and auxiliary meet at VFW hall, 8 P. TEL j- . : I I , I THURSDAY I Circle a. First Presbyterian I church, with Mrs. Gertrude Wells, 134 Wyatt Court, covered dlah ; picnic. 1:1$ p. m. ;"-- - f j. - ntlOAT " i Silver tea to benefit Women's ; lounge at Youth Center, 3 to 4 I p. m. V . i i ' ; ' 1- i : Primes Are; Guests I in jj Capital j Captain and Mrs. Frank; V. Prime, jr, and their 18 months old son, Frank, in, arrived, in the capital Saturday to spend his' ten day leave at the country home of his parents. Dr. and Mrs. Frank V. Prime. i The couple drove north from Bakers field, Calif. After his leave Captain Prime will report to Kearns, Utah for overseas duty. His wife and son will then j go to Portland to reside with her. parents, Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence . Jamieson. ; Dr. and Mrs. Prime and their j son and family are leaving Mon day for' a several days fishing I trip. ; ) 1 : '!' : . ! Silver Tea ! Planned, Friday ; The Council of Church Wom en will hold a silver tea July 6 at the Youth Center at 136 South High street from 2 to 4 o'clock. The tea is to be given as a bene- j fit for the woman's lounge, which : the council maintains there. : :A11 interested Women are In vited to attend, to meet the Wom en connected with the lounge and to see the rooms. M .-!-. i r ' ! . - f i Mrs. Willis Dasfsrth and children,, David and Bill, ' and Mrs. Bruce Carkin are returning today from Road's End where they have b e e n for the past month. i ' i i Perm. Push m tk I Wave . . . i!.3l Extra for Finger-; i wave, or Hairdress Open Thurs. Eve.: ! by Appointment ! Castle Perm. Wavers I SOS First National Bank Bids. aore up -to HeW Tricks way with cotton is glori ous and jcjrlarnjorous. The colors are ablaze with newness . . . brilliant pinks, sharp yellows, , brilliant greens and blues. And style keeps pace with color . . excitement in every onel Buy now for Summer! i 1 --. ;s Jis J ' " t I . Mazine buren Saleiri Girl Will Go : East Miss Mary Laughlin, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. S. B. Laughlin will leave Saturday for the east coast. Miss Laughlin, who grad uated from Willamette univer sity last week, has accepted a position on the clerical staff at the American Friends service committee at headquarters office in Philadelphia. She will begin her new work on August 1. Enroutc east Miss Laughlin will stop in Chicago and Cham pagne, Illinois, -where she will 'visit her brother and siter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Laughlin (Bar-; i bara Kester). j Mr. amd Mrs. T. L. ErtcksM. Lorimor, Iowa, are Visiting at the home of Mr. j and j Mrs. Lloyd ! Drorbaugh. The wotaen are sis-L ters. This is the Erickson's first . "T t . ' ; inp wesv,-- ; i, . - i. ! f ; I 4 &fJ' I WAYS TO BUY FDBS AT SCHLESINGER'S 1. BUDGET 2. CHARGE 3. CASH f'-'. -'" : I j ' j ' -.. -i I 4. LAYAWAY r v t. V Lt and Mrs. Courtney Johns,. who have been in Sa , lem visiting at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Claude Johns. The couple came west from Indianapolis where he has been stationed at Scott Field with the Judge i advocate general's department He will report for reas- ' 7 signment In the Pacific. Mrs. Johns, the former Mazine p Meith, will return to her home In Portland (Kennell-Ellls). .The chapter f Navy Mothers met Friday at the YMCA for busineas session. The mem bers agreed to each make a lap- - robe for the Corvallis naval hos pital, to be completed by the lat ter part of Jury. A picnic will be held at the home of Mrs. James Hartley, Beach street in a month. Mrs. W. H. Loreni, Mrs. Sarah Is. i: Now is for the PLAN 0 J X i XL Thom and Mrs. R. W, Habd make up the committee. Mr. Charles four children of Torest Grove, have been visiting at the home of her sister Mrs. Clayton Steinke for several days. ""5 f N6yMihe: Time To Select Your Fur Coat New .". Exciting Fur Coats! So lovelyjto look at so lovely to wear "so lovely over your flowing gowns and smart over your town clothesl -' 1 .. r. --"i : :- - i: ; ' ":. . .V-.j' me time to make your selection coming cold month. O At Schlesmger $ you will not be pressed to buy. Your in spection is cordially invited. O You1 re sure to save money on your fur cgat'at Schlesingers. - T ' - ! . O Hundreds of new 1946 styles to choose from! -' , BUY . I . ! BONDS ' HI MM 1