jOEIGOll STATECMAIL ffedooOrogoa, Sunday Mon, rcmber X 1943 .1 EdiiieBraclieia: t A i i ::t -r. V :-y a -s r. :...!- Miss Margaret Hood, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. J. W. Hood of Independence, whose betrothal to Lt. James S. Smart, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Smart of Salem, has been announced. No definite plans have been made for the wedding. Lt. Smart recently returned from two years cf overseas duty with the marines. He is now on termin al leave. (Jesten-Miller). . Girl Reserves Corner Invitation were, in the mail this week to a "P. M." party presented by Salore, young bus iness girls club of the YWCA. The social gathering is to be held Monday at 8:00. Any girl inter ested is invited to attend. Reser vations may be made by calling the YWCA before Monday noon. Committees are, Invitations, Miss, Rosalie Dalke, refresh ments. Miss Mildred Yetter;. en tertainment, Misses Dorothy "I4IM. th'sfniff Tht iiicontpUtoirs Hsdionic Hearing Aid Bsttar Wring nwut Ultar. fuller bmg day in and day out. What 5wr f ift could you fl nd for a bard U hoaxing loved onrl I ' m " . L. - Fr rawarM maaai With Nw Nautral Color ' WW H W Xl I . - aj V Modal A-S-A 5000 CoadaetUa Zenith for thoaa a physicians racoauaaad Uustvpa.MoUlB-S-A 3U StaaJarJ Air CoaJuctUa Zoaiih far T h rim hi. . ' A-3-A Far Seeing and Hearing nonius OPTICAL 444 State Phone 5528 Salem ! Thompson, Esther Murphy and Elinor Danielson. Young Married The recently organized young matrons club of the YWCA elect ed Mrs. Carl Halvonon, presi dent, at the meeting Thursday afternoon Other, officers in- i elude Mrs. Jack Decker vice- j president, Mrs. C. E. Prince, sec- ' retary - treasurer, Mrs. Edwin Johnson, chairman of the mem bership committee and Mrs.. Max Smith, chairman of the constitution committee. During the business session, which followed a dessert lunch eon, organization plans were dis cussed and the membership drive launched. The purpose of the or ganization is for the enrichment of home life, personal develop ment, and service to others. Any young married woman Interested may get further details by con tacting one of the officers or calling the YWCA. The next meeting will be held Thursday, December 13. Girl Reserves November 25-December 2 was World Fellowship week, and Girl Reserves and Tri-Y clubs coop erated in club activities to raise, money to be sent to the national YWCA for foreign distribution. - Monday night, Winifred Heard chapiter of Tri-Y had open house for mothers. The program com mittee was Delia Saaybe, chair man, Ruth Holtzman, Shirley Reiman, Beverly Jones and Al ' ice Woodward. Miss Amanda Anderson,' high school advisor for the chapter welcomed par ' ents. The program included: Shirtee Reimann, "Londendary Air," accompanist, Delia Saaybe; piano, solo by Jodelle Parker, LitUe White Donkey; read- lng by Alvina Meyers, "America to Great Britain," Mrs. Gerald Wrisley, a former member of the YWCA in Hawaii, told facts" about thf islands and exhibited I a display of souvenirs. Hostesses were: Peggy Burroughs, repre senting Hollaad; Alice Wood-, ward, China; Ruth Holtzman, Spain, Pat Powell, Scotland, Be verly Jones, Switzerland, Delia - Saayle, Denmark and Shirlee By Maxine Baren There'll be j music from two operas on 'the General motors program today, Helen Taubel will sing on the Ford Sunday evening hour on KEX: and Wanda Landowsky will play the piano with the New York Phil-? harmonic symphony. Today's programs are . 11 a. m. '(CBS) Paul Lavalle will direct the Stradivari orches tra lnTuriant from the fBar tered Bride Romberg's "Saver Moon," the waltz from "Romeo and Juliet"' and others.. S j i 11:30 (NBC) John Charles Thomas program includes , "Un-1 ft T ta by Sanderson; and music of N n2rfl Tli Massenet and Hastings: orches- Vi-SOAJ-ll tral numbers will be those I of Rossini and! Grieg. f H 13 to 1:30 CBS) The New York" Philharmonic-Symphony will feature Wanda Landowska In the piano concerto in E flat major by Mozart with the orch estra under '(the direction of Ar thur Rodziniski. The orchestra will also play "Mozartiana"! suite by Tchaikowsky and The Seven Ages" by Carpenter.! j 2:00 I (NBC) Arturo Toscanini will direct the NBC symphony; lit Act 1 of Norma, introduction and Druids chorus, by Bellini, Te Deum" by Verdi, and "Mefis-; " tofele prologue by Boito. Nicola : Moscona basso, will sing, and the chorus will, be under the direc ! tion of Peter Wilhousky. f j 8 pjn. (Blue) Helen Traubel wiU sing "Vot Lo Sapete' from Masagni's fCavalleria Rustica na, rUebestrod from "Tristan and tsolde; and Ole Speaks j "Moruing. In an arrangement l.withJthe Ford Chorus, she will r sing iXove's Old Sweet Song" i and 'Oh God, Above the Drift-I ! lng Years" ;;ly Webbe. Reginald Stewart wi be guest conductor; Monday, if Gladys Swarthout will appear on the Firestone hour at 5:30 singing "None But the Lonely Heart," and "Do Not ' Go My Love," and others. Ezio Pinza basso, will sing "Addio by TostL "Si La Rigeur"from 'v ::.. ! !1 1 111 11 --' - -r.- - im i iii'i'iiii r : Joan Crawford comforts her screea daughter (Ann Blyth) In the . above scene from Warners' new film drama, "Mildred Pierce," now showing at Elslnore. Starred In the film with Miss Crawford are Zachary Scott and Jack, Carson. all DDD i This past week has been much more conducive to indoor garden ing than outdoor. Picture garden ing in ' books and c a t a 1 o gues is quite attractive again. Advertise rnents have many more In teresting listings than in recent years. t Hy a clnths, which have been definitely low, again are being offered. Holland is , exporting, all jnial, grows about three feet tall, : and has white, rose or mauve-purple flowers on from June to Aug ust if not permitted to go to seed. The fragrance is one of the chief attractions although this is a very good cut flower.The Sweet Rock et needs a sunny situation in the border. Many gardeners report best results by handling these as biennials.! j :.- f Naked-Lady,! is a name used In the midwest for the summer blooming ; bulbous herb, lycoris squamigera. . ' - j S. R. asks what is pot mar- joram, j ' - . I Ans.: This is one of the sweet I marjorams, which is used for fla voring dressings and meat dishes. This name was commonly used in Crosby's Toice Capitol Treat ; t Eddie Bracken says he s been "swoondled."' -' J ' - -i ' ! Now starring1 with Veronica Lake and .. Diana Lynn in Para mount's "Out of This World," at the Capitol theatre. Bracken has a peeve. By some j slick camera leg erdemain, Eddie croons in the kind of way responsible tot sending the bobby-soxers and their maiden aunts out of this world. 1 But here's V the hitch. "The Voice" the screen youngsters hear belongs to "the, groaner" Bing Crosby. To make: matters worse. Sing's four Kids, also appearing in the film, join theifun by rib bing the airwaves' newest sensa tion with "doesn't that voice sound familiar?" i . f - , j It all starts when Eddie, a West ern Union messenger boy, stum bles across Diana and her all-girl glamour band. She hires him to sing with the band at some char ity function, at which time publi city-wise Veronica stages a con vincing swoon. This stunt makes "Lif e" and from then on it's fame, fortune and headaches for the Bracken boy wonder who wins fame on the radio. :1 Despite all this, Eddie says he can forgive screen writers Arthur Phillips and v Walter De Leon for cheating him out of. an honest-to- goodness fling at singing because he ends- up with lovely Diana in lus.armsl. . I. LUlia Madaen the advertisements tell us. ; Some new ones, but also many old friends ' are listed, including the white L Innocence; me soft Rose I some of theolder earden books Lady Derby, the pink Marconi, but it little;f erred to in the new- the sky blue Perle Brilliant. You almost can smell the lilacs on the racemes pictured in the catalogues and garden magazine advertisements. - Before me are pictured the red-purple Charles Joly, the old reliable double white Edith Carvell and the light blue double Olivier deSerre. But the pictures of Edith Carvell. are no better than! my own were last spring In the garden. I have nev er seen such large clusters of lilac bloom as the Edith Carvell produ- er ones. Usually it is grown as an annual. The seeds are sown in flats and the tiny plants are prick ed out into other flats. The seeds are very small and easily buried too deeply. The foliage is gath ered just before the flowering pe riod sets in. ced in Willamette valley gardens "La Juive"Jby Halevy and the prin;"1. orchestra will play other num- br..rAll arc on NBC - - I I The "Great Moments in Music"! Wednesday night at 7 will on feature excerpts from "Andrea; Chenler" by Girodano. CBS car ries this program. f j j . The broadcasts on Saturdays from the stage of the Metropol-, itan 'opera r will continue tin; a series1 of 18 performances to be heard on KEX. I P ! I 0 f ! Woman's' Relief Cerps auxil iary to the Grand Army of the: Republic will meet at the Veter-j an's hall Friday at 2 o'clock for election of i officers. A covered dish luncheon will be served at Naked-Lady! noon in nonor or tne new mem-: rosemallow. bers preceding the meeting. Also pictured this month are a number of trilliums such as the 15-inch tall; purple, followed by red fruit; the lemon yellow tril lium, with Jts mottled green leaves, and about nine Inches tall, and the rose-colored trillium growing about 18 inches tall. Answers to Questions: Mrs. D. Y. asks for information on Ladys Mantle. Ans.: this is a low-growing rock garden plant, a hardy ; perennial belonging to the rose family. Al- Turner Residences Sold to New Owners 1 - ' ' ' V.-' J ' " ' 1 1 TURNER Ray Fames has sold his house to Delmer Barber.: Rob ert Parrent has purchased the Lucille McKinney house. "I ' TAa J: l am i i ' i mkt v,.L2mmmmmmmmmmmmmm3L. A iat ..I an sum It's curtains for Eddie Bracken when Diana Lynn's around In Para- mount's "Out of This World, now at Capitol theatre, r&aoie, wn ee-stars with Veronica Lake and Diana, plays the role of an Idolized crooner whose voice has that familiar. Crosby ring. Bing probably wanted to be represented somehow in order to keep tabs en his four youngsters who make their film debut! In this musical comedy hit. Joan Crawford iii !Pierce: Thriller Note at Elsinore i H "Mildred Pierce, Warner Bros. distinguished production of James Cain's engrossing tale of a tainted wife, starring Joan Crawford, Zachary Scott and Jack Carson, is now playing at 1he Elsinore. The exciting odyssey of a grass widow, "Mildred Pierce" provides Joan Crawford with the finest role of her career anctaudiences with the most absorbing movie experience in years.- ; "Mildred Pierce' is three ways great As a description of jnother love, It is affecting and poignant It is fascinating, too, as a sharp and accurate what - makes -,em-tick analysis of the soul of a heeL And it is a tense, gripping, superior-caliber murder mystery. Considered in any one of these categories, "M i 1 d r e d ' Pierce" would be rated an outstanding film.V Successfully blending all three, it is something special for j I BOB HOPE IS A F I I -'- .: ..I. William Eythe and Slgne Hasso find their paths Inevitably in tertwined jinj 20th Centry-Fox's electrifying drama of one of the tooghest, most relentless man hunts In history, brought to the screen in "The House On 92nd Street," now at the Grand, mrnm tun chemilla is 1 the botanical name. The roots may be divided here in the Willamette valley either in November or April. S. G. G. asks for information on Sweet Rocket and I II hzt .1 No "moaaed" smaUl Absolutely bo odor! ' - . -Out of wartime's scien tific discoveries comes NUDE ... remarkable new -hair remover that is safe, odorless and guaranteed effective ... three features no other hair-remover can claim! Try NUDE today! No Unpleasantness be cause NUDE is an absolutely odorless, pure white cream. 3) Can not Injure sooulh oc m Skinl .1 . NUDE is scientifically prepared of purest ingre dients. No razor cuts, no chemical burns! No muss . . no fuss . . no stubble! NUDE removes superfluous hair instant ly; is guaranteed effective. Om application last lot weeks! WILLETTS EnpiM Brag SSosrc Ccrv CUU and Liberty -W Phono 31 IS Reimann. Ireland. Invitation committee jwas: Delia Saaybe,; Alice Woodward, Catherine Coo per, j u - i S" J Grace Elliott and Abbie Gra ham chapters of Tri-Y met Wed nesday at the YWCA to contrib ute to world fellowship and ap point planning committees fori the next meeting. f ' j I Ann Guthrie chapter of TrirYl enjoyed a covered-dish supper m the fireplace room of the YWCA Thursday. A world fellowship program was presented follow- lng the dinner. Pat McNamara is: president and Mrs. Harmon Gar4 rett advisor I j . Mrs. David Brown, advisor of Margaret Meade chapter of Tri-I Y met with her club Thursday at the YWCAj'lMoney was contrib-j uted for world fellowship. jMag-l gie Eggens is president . j Parrish eighth grade Girl Re serves withMargaret Newcomb as advisor, planned a "save the food", supper. The money saved on the meal would go.to World Fellowship. l Mary Polales; and Leona Todd; were in charge bf the committees. . . Ans.f Rose-mallow is a common name for hibiscus, a showy-flowered herb, "sometimes shrublike. The flowers come in white, pink or crimson. It needs quite a bit of ffun to do well. Itwill grow here, however. Sweet rocket is the common name for .Hesperis ma tronalis. Sometimes . lt is called Dames-violet It is a hardy peren- CLUB CALENDAR MONDAY I American Legion auxuiai Woman plubhousc. S p.m xianon. t - United Spanish War Veterans and auxiliary, meet at VTW ball. . S p.m. Wesleyan servica guild. Jason Lee church, with Mrs. R. D. Bright. 849 E street, S pjn. American War Mothers, USO, S p.m. i . Alpha XI Delta alumnae with Mrs. Glenn Stevens, S49 North 23rd street, dessert meeting, S ' p.m. -!' , Salem Daughters of the Nil Sewing and luncheon. Masonic Temple. TCESDAxI Central SWCTU with Mrs. L Corcas, 358 North 18th street, t -p.m. ' i - Missouri Ladles club with Mrs. . Alvin Stewart. Culver Road, des sert luncheon, 1 pjn gift ex ' change, i , Eastern Star. Chadwick chap ter. No. 37. Masonic Temple. S pjn. i i ThereU No Finer than Si Let us plant' your aquarium now to be picked up at Christmas. 'A small deposit u ill hold tliem. 5 nillGLAIID'S PEIi SHOP 463 Ferry I Phone 6859 Between Liberty and High HOLLYWOOD Nearly every thing about Bob Hope is a gag. Even 1 the red bicycle he j rides from his dressing-room to the set carries a sign to warn borrowers: T)rop it, brother! Bob Hope. The quips tossed off. between camera takes by the guy with the scoop nose and underslung jaw are as funny as any that get into his- pictures. .:, "" ' u j - ., The. director called for quiet, and In the distance a carpenters' foreman sang put melodiously to his crew: "Ho-o-old that ham mer!" .-). f "Amazing the jobs that guy Vallee gets,! Bob remarked, smacking his gum. He chews it incessantly, tucking it into a cor ner of nis mouth when called upon to act f Bob is currently making his version of the 1924 Rudolph Val entino starrer,! "Monsieur Beau caire." Clad in purple satin, knee breeches and square-cut coat with lace collar, he rushed around an eighteenth century royal Span ish apartment! .frantically con cealing beautiful ladies behind chairs, tables, screens, r ': H "Another Week of this and IH be ready to fight Joe Louis!'" he cried finally, flopping into a big cloth-covered chair. .1 . I He looked tired. A Victory Bond show had kept him up late the night before, and he had been at the studio since 7:15 in the morn ihg. Around his brown eyes were little lines. In his dark brown hair, mussed by the white wig ne naa just yanxea on, were threads of gray. ' - YJLLTIME GAGMAN j He hopes to take, his radio troupe on another overseas tour, combination rest and troop en tertainment sea voyage to Tokyo. He has traveled more than 300,- 000 miles to entertain servicemen They're wonderful audiences, he said. "It took 15 j minutes to Warm up this Victory Bond crowd last night, but: service guys why, they're already hot when you walk on the stage; they're par-boiled.' A dialogue director: interrupted to go over some lines with Hope. I "Again came the cry for quiet and, in the distance', the voice of the l carpenters' foreman , warb ling: "Ho-o-old that ham-mer!" "I don't think it's worth hiring Lawrence Tibbett for just that one bit," Bob observed. Now; Showing VaraaUalAU WHS Co-Feature , ' Wlia tai ' ELU0TT .gaUrrtUItJ now TmTmTm t Buy Victorf J lLj I I II j I d Bond Today! the discriminating movie-goerj Produced by Jerry Wald, "Mil dred Pierce was directed by Mi chael; Curtiz and written for, the screen by Ranald MacDougall. ' Supporting the principal players are Eve Arden, Ann Blyth and Bruce1 Bennett "Mildred Pierce" was photographed by Ernest Hal- ler.. Comnoser Max Sterner cre ated the special musical score. . William Eythe Stars in Grand ..... Theatre Film Almost as nerve-shattering as the suspense-filled, drama "The House On 92nd Street, was the actual filming of the picture now playing at ' the Grand theatre. starring William Eythe, Lloyd "No lan and Signe Hasso. j The script, written from rec ords on file with the FBI, de manded the utmost accuracy and realism.' - "-.f-; Arrangements Were made in New. York with the owners to use offices, beauty parlors, book stores and hotel lobbies needed as set tings for vital scenes in the cript. But to 1 shoot the action on the streets, a means had to be devised without causing crowds to gather. This problem was solved by the FBI when they loaned the com pany one of their special surveil lance vehicles which they use for sectret photography. Inside, the camera crew could point their lenses in any direction without being seen, while the stars played scenes right in the heart of New York. -- V 1 JOAtiPM m t 4 She knew there was trouble coming trouble 6he made tor herself " A ! 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