Club Women Plan Events Reception Salem Woman's club i plan ning m benefit bridge and pinochle party for the afternoon of Febru ary 14, at the clubhou?e. All those interej-ted in securing tickets may I contact Mrs. David Wright, who has charge of tables. At the meeting of Saturday the club oted to set in motion a campaign for bettering the quality (f motion picture hows presented to children Mrs. Herbe.t t. Hahe. chairman of the club's department of applied education, is spear heading the campaign. Mrs. Glen S Paxscn read a let ter from the General FtcKralimi of Women's club, a-king thi.t supplies, such as note books, pen cils, crayon.", games, and kmdei garten -upplies be collerted and ' sent in for the use of school chil dren in China. Ethiopia, and Ko rea, the countries which are now receiving I'NRA assistance from! the United States. These Mipp'ics may be brought to the clubhouse at the next meeting, where they will te parked and .-hipped to the proper headquarteis for distribu tion. New members received into the club included Mrs J. S Muirav. Mrs. Agnes Booth. Mrs. R. L. Elf Mrom, Mrs. Ray Stumbo, and Mrs. Clarence Willson A program of v iolin numbers, played by Mrs. Elizabeth Webb McDowell, accompanied by Mrs. I Margaret Hoid Smart. vas pre f en ted. Mrs. R H. Lesher w..v guest speaker and houd motion pictures of life in Ala ka and the islands along the cnast. Mrs I-esher also had on display two tables of art objects and articles r yOU CAN'T HAVE SOAPS, WOOLENS, V I I TIRES, CARS, IRONS, ETC., I l i WITHOUT W FATS 1 I I ' AND OILS. THERE'S I i J STILL A WORLD- I I WIDE SHORTAGE OF FATS. i i I , i j Theyre needed today, j i more than ever beforeli i i I mm in Wot that "fresh-from-the-farm" flavor ak for United Growers Brand frozen fresh Fruits and Vegetables. Only the finest quality produce, selected and frozen by the giowers themselves is packed umder this label. Look for United Growers Brand in your grocer's freezer AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE asfrifaf fry Corafeo Soles Cmmpmmy. SSO i Society Music .... MA JON! BURET Women's Ed Hoi of common household use among the Alaskan Indians. Mrs. George Swift had charge of tea arrangements, with Mrs. Frank Speais, sr. and Mrs. Custer Ross pouring. Follows Concert Dean and Mrtv Melvin Geist and Professor and Mrs. Ralph Dcbbs were hosts for an informal reception Monday night at the Geists' West Lefelle street home in honor of Prof, and Mrs. Josef Schnelke r. The fcffair followed Professor Schnelker's gigan recital at the First Presbyterian church. He is assistant piofessor of organ and theory at Willamette university. Members of the music faculty and a few friends were bidden to the at fair. The hosts and honor guests received informally in the liv ing room. The- buffet table was centered with an arrangement of earlv spring flowers flanked by pink and orchid tapers. Hostesses to Fete Clubs Mrs. George A. Arbuckle will preside at a dessert luncheon Wed nesday afternoon at her home for members of her club. Contract will b' in play following the luncheon h-ur Additional guests will be Mrs Dale Shepherd and Mrs. Richard Giabcnhorst. Mrs. Clinton Standish has in vited members ot her club to a -alad luncheon this afternoon at her home on Sorth Church street. Special guests will be Mrs. Roy Mink. Mrs. Harry Fredricks and Mrs J. A. Rothenfluch. Mrs. T. H Gallnv.av was a luncheon and bridge hostess Mon day afternoon ai her heme for members of her club. Pupils in Recital At YM Tonight i The Salem Federated Music clubs will present a group of pupil- in lecital tonight at the , VMCA at 7.30 o'clock. Counsel lors i. i- Mis David Eason. Will iam Fiivvk, Charles Hargrave. Mrs Dalbert Jep-en, Mrs. Jessie Bush Micktison. Mrs. Jack Morrison. Lea Ora Northcutt, Prof. T. S Roberts, Sacred Heart Academy. Mrs. John Schmidt, jr., and Miss, Elma Weller. The program and participants .re as follows: Vale of Song Rolfe Music Box Milell Rollin Htrb.-l By the D p Sea Steinhei-ner The Guitar Guvnor Helen Lewis A Little Bo.tt (joes Sa ling Frothingham Janet Woodroffe The Robins Return Fisher Thelma Powell Charmante Groton I Sht ii ill Bnnkley Gavotte Popper Frank Lebcld Loiu Du Bali Gillette 1 G!en Banner Vocal Pale Moon Logan Diane Reed The Little N'ifiar Debussy Charles Haigrave. Ji The Surf Van Dyke Joan Hoereth Whims Schvmiann Frances Baum King wood Home Extension L'nit will meet on Wednesday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Arnold Coffel. route one. There j will be a demonstration on the I care of fabrus. Clubs The Home IERYME ENGLISH Society Editor CLUB CALENDAR TirSDAY Laurel Social Hour club with Mrs. Monty Jones, dessert luncheon. Alpha Crmiia Delta alumnae lth l Mrs Ervin Peterson. IMS S. Summer ft . p m St. Vincent de Paul mothers' club. 2 pm. Pi Beta Phi mothers meet at chapter hnue .no-hot luncheon, 1 15 p m. ; WKONESUAV i Plhun Sisterc. K P. hall. p. m. Kinzwood Home Extension Unit at Mr? Arnold Coffel's home, route one. 1 30. p ni ! Missionary meeting. First Congrega- t.onal church. 2 30 p. m. i Roval Neighbors meet VTW hall. 8 p m . initiation and installation. WSCTS of rirst Methodist church meet in Carrier Room, business meeting. 10 45 a m . luncheon at noon. THURSDAY Thursday Evening Literature group, with Mrs E. A Carlton. Liberty at Ewald. S p. m. Sunshine Seuing club of Hazel Grren. with Mrs Alvin J VanCleave OAV ind auxiliary, pinochlo and game. 8 p m . Salem Woman's club house. 60 N. Cottage st. Public in vited. Havesville Woman's club. 1 15 des sert luncheon w ilh Mrs. Claude Tal inagc. CO Duncan way. Salem Council of Women"! Organ izations, chamber of commerce. 2 p m . FRIDAY Woman's Auxiliary and St Paul's guild, loint meeting al parrish house 12 30 covered dish luncheon. Past Matrons asoc;alion of Chad wicli chapter, OES. dinner meeting. Colrlen Pheasant. 6 30 p m. SATl'RIMY AAL'W luncheon meeting. Marion hotel. 1 p m Charles A. Sprague will speak on "Proposed Legislation'' at the Salem Crurwil of Women's or samziitions meeting at the cham ber of commerce Thin day after noon at 2 o'clock. Miss Lenoie Headley of the Marion county department of health will give a -hort talk on infantile paralysis. Cold Com fort Ideal Home Refrigerator Should Have Space, Frozen Food, Ice, Vegetables Br Maxine Buren Woman's Ed. tor. The Statesman We have felt for some time that designers have forgotten the real purpose of the home electric refrigerator, which is to store foods in the home. Looking at samples of various machines not long ago. we detected a trend toward furnishing the heavy drinker with .pace for ice cubes, rather than : --t- providing a place for the mother of the family to store fruit, veg etables, meat and milk. One machine contained a large compartment in the (enter, hold ing a dozen ice trays. Metal plates divided the compartment so that it would he impossible to slip in packages of frozen foods. There w;;s no place in the machine where a pound of strawberries or beans , could be kept frozen overnight While there are many families who consider the liquid intake more important than that of solid food, the function of the kitchen unit is still primarily for storing food. Let ice making remain a side issue. With a ensational rise in the amount of foods frozen by the hou.-ewife of this area, she needs storage space for some of that frozen food even if ice must be hmited to two or so trays Now to me. the big need is a refrigerator viith space to keep 1 enough frozen food to last the family one to two weeks. For does it not seem economy to have a food locker in a commercial plant at $7 50 to $9 a year for storing bulk of the food, and a home unit within the regular refrigerator to hold that for immediate use'' If the family has a "surplus $1300 to $1500. a home plant would be ideal but for the average, one machine must suffice. One manufacturer, probably having waited until the house wife forgot the fabulous promises for the "post war world." now comes up with what seems a ! I It's Natural... for a FLY No,thatupsidedown' feeling doesn't disturb our insect friend. But when we humans are up set, it's quite a different matter. Been having too man of those "spells" luely? Might be a sound VV1LLETTS CAPITAL DRUG STORE Conur State & Liberty - Phone 3118 ! Salem Girl Weds m East i From the east comes news of the marriage of Mis Lcla Bell Sanders, formerly of Salem, to Samuel Frank, CRM. USN, on No- I v ember 6 at the Queens county courthouse in Jamaica. For her wedding the bride wore a pearl gray suit with black hat and accessories and a corsage of gardenias. Following their honey - i moon the newlyweds went to Bal i timore to visit with his family, j At present Mr. Frank is at the I naval hospital at St. Albans, Long j Island, New York, where the cou- pie reside. ! The new Mrs. Frank is a grad ' uate of Willamette university and i was employed here at the state ) library. She served in the WAC i for two years. She is now doing research work for an ecpnomic analyst in Manhattan. , IJttle Boy Welcomed Congratulations go to Mr. and Mrs. James H. Nicholson, jr. (Dor is Drager) on the birth of a son, I James Harold, III, Saturday, Jan j uary 11 at the Salem General 1 hosnital. The little boy, who weighed ' eight pounds and two ounces, is i the grandson of Mrs. James H. Nicholson, sr. and Mr. and Mrs. j Rue Drager. His great-grand-1 mother is Mrs. William Laughton of Portland. I Missionary meeting of the First ' Congregational church will be; held Wednesday at the church at 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. C. Buisman and ! Mrs. D. L. Rhoda will lead the devotions. A discussion of the theme "Thy Neighbor in India" , will be led by Mrs. S. J. Butler. Music will be presented by pupils of Mis Lena Belle Tartar. Host esses will be Mis. Eric Butler. Mis Clarence Blundell. Mrs: Her-; man Brown, Mrs. M. C. Stegner, Mrs. W. T. Grier and Mrs. Delta Hill. down-to-earth home refrigerator. It's to go into production soon. One compartment, the Freeze Chest, holds 43 pounrs of frozen food or one and a quarter cubic feet of space. It is refrigerated on four sides and can be u-ed for a limited amount of freezing and for its primary job. frozen food storage. The second freezing compart ment holds 13 pounds, or four tenths cubic foot. There are four trays for ice cubes. There are two freezing con- trols. one is manually operated, the other automatic, In the main compartment there ' two large vegetable crispers wlth glass covers that hold one- half bushel of vegetables and fruits. This sounds like the ideal ma- chine for the woman who, within the past few years, has changed nr way of food preservation from entirely canned, to at least half fiozen -nd who now faces the problem of working out a prac- tical and not too expensive method of storing it. IWT- fLASUES? Women Is your 'i'-lhU sml ir.Mll- Clue la rfl rnuu uj ir iiri v nu, .."-'. " nrrtoui tcnalon hen dut to the functional 'mlddle-aac period pecu liar to women. Worth trvxna! IJTLI PIHKMtrS cSB.Vo':. idea to see a Doctor. If perchance be gives you one of those decorated pieces of paper well, you know, ibis is a "Reliable Prescriptions' Pbsrmscy. VTc'Il fill it promptly and precisely -,..Ma-ii QP Legislative Bv 'eryine Fnalth AT THE INAl GL'RAL . . . Highlight of opening day at the legislature on Monday was the inaugural of Governor Earl Snell . . . many coming from out of town for the occasion . . . Mrs. Snell in a becoming brown Uil leur with matching chapeau with feather trim . . . Receiving con gratulations on their husbands' elections . . . Mr?. Marshall Cor nett of Klamath Falls, wife of the president of the senate . . . she in all gray . . . and Mrs. John Hall of Portland, whose husband is speaker of the house, wearing a gray dress with large black off-the-face hat . . . accompanied by son, John, and daughter, Mary Elizabeth, a junior at Catlin school in Portland, who will only be down on weekends during the ses sion . . . The Halls ajso have a 10 months old daughter, Diane. Out-of-towners . . . With the George Flaggs were Dr. and Mrs. Fred Thompson. of The Dalles . . . Mrs. Flagg distinctive in a chrome gray ensemble . . . Bishop and Mrs. Bruce R. Baxter here from Portland . . . she wearing a soft gray tailleur to which was pinned a gardenia corsage . . . Mrs. L. L. Riggs of Portland, active in re publican circles, chic in a mus tard gold wool dress sprinkled with gold nailheads and large beige felt -hat . . . More of same . . . Also from Portland came Mrs. Paul Keeney. State Treasurer Les lie Scott's daughter . . . Dorothy McCullough Lee. former state sen ator, and now one of Portland's city commissioners . . . Mrs. George R. K. Moorhead, who claims Salem her home, but di vides her time between Portland, the capital and Eugene, wore a black and white pin stripe tail leur and matching hat . . . Mrs. Thomas E. Rilea, who accompa nied her army general husband to th capital for the festivities, wore a robin's egg blue dress under her black coat and her tiny black vel vet hat was enhanced with feath ers . . . State officials . . . accompanied by their wives to the ceremony . . . Mr. and Mrs. George Alexan der . . . the George Aikens . . . Mr. and Mrs. Silas Gaiser . . the Claude Murphys . . . her smalt mist blue felt hat trimmed with matching feathers . . . Mr. and Mrs. Roy H. Mills . . . Mr. and Mrs. William H. Hammond with their daughter, Constance . . . Legislators' wives . . . Everyone greeting each other ... as for many it had been two years since they had met . . . Mrs. Dean Walk er of Independence her usual smart self in a spruce green wool crepe, gray fur coat and pert black felt with feather . . . Mrs. Merle Chessman of Astoria wear ing a chestnut brown and white cheek suit and brown hat with feather trim . . . Mrs. William Walsh of Coos Bay, who will again serve as secretary for her sena tor husband, in a black tailleur . . . and Mrs. Eugene Marsh of McMinnv ille, who will also be her husband's secretary . . . Orchids ... a purple one pinned to Mrs. Earl T. Newbry's fur coat . . . a lovely complement to her chartreuse feather hat . . . Mrs. Paul L. Patterson of Hillsboro jj:u 4 U 2135 FAIRGROUNDS ROAD 1'i''-i- W' ' V'fi' -' '.v, t -'" m ' . ' A Vp 1 j I . -y-- hX.,.av J ' f at ..iW-- J i .y .. Mee Fussiest r rsftj Housekeeper in Salem VU ALrOX V" There's no more fastidious housekeepers than the folk vliL" f ' t''S who worlt m bia ncw Mayflower plant In Salem. h''f' j j Under their eagle eye every single piece of equipment V ""j ' ' ' " taken apart after every day's operation, washed. 1 f I - crubkL inspected and sterilised. TJbis painstaking V , '1- cleanliness is an Important link in the long chain of il, - C V ' J anltary precautions which make Mayflower Milk so V-,'n-f minr - , K Is" - i,, J safe and wholesome. V'TV? ' ''it' ', wL , - j, , ' Visitors Always Welcome v, f Tidbits wore an orchid on her brown coat . . . her winter beige hat trimmed in brown srtin ribbon . . . and a cordage cf baby orchids on Mrs. Paul Hendricks fur coat . . . Others noted , . . Mrs. Lee Pat terson of Portland wearing a blue tweed coat and her black hat en hanced with blue feathers . . . Mrs. Howard Belton of Canby coming in with her young snd at tractive daughter . . . Mrs. Lew Wallace of Portland chic in a black coat with Persian lamb trim and a small black hat adorned with blue feathers . . . Mrs. John Carson and Mrs. Harry H. Belt together . . . another duo . . . Mrs. Hall S. Lusk and Mir. James T. Brand, who is busy getting every thing in readiness so as to leave in a minute's notice for Germany, to join Judge Brand, who plans j to leave Thursday for the east coast . . . Petite Mrs. Ernest R. Fatland of Condon wearing black . . . also choosing black was Mrs. ; Allan Carson, wife of Salem's ' Senator Carson . . . and Mrs. George Rossman, wife of Chief Justice Rossman . . . Mrs. Colon j R. Eberhard of LaGrande accom panied her representative husband to Salem for the session and they are domiciled at the Lewis Grif fith home on Court street . . This will be a acation for Mrs. Eberhard as she is an active club woman in the eastern Oregon city, serving as president of the Wom an's club. On the payroll . . . Any num ber of young Salem matrons have taken the next few months off from their household duties to rake in the session . . . Among these we glimpsed the first day were Mrs. Conrad Paulson, Mrs. Harry Schenk, Mrs. Elmer Woo ton, Mrs. Robert Joseph, Mrs. Robert Drager, Mrs. Robert Need ham, Mrs. Arthur Knox. Mrs. Carl Porter and blende Mrs. Bill Bryan (Betty Cronin). DALLAS Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Ediger of Dallas, announce the engagement of their daughter Bet ty to Gerald Wilbur Morland, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Morland of Dallas. Miss Ediger is a senior at the Dallas high school and Mr. Mor land is attending Oregon College of Education at Monmouth. No date has been set for the wedding. Royal Neighbors will meet Wed nesday night at the VFW hall at 8 o'clock. Initiation of new members will take place to be followed by installation of the new officers. Mrs. F. M. Hoyt will be the installing officer and Mrs. G. W. Walker, the installing cere monial maishall. MRS. ROBERT SCHNOEDER State Accredited Piano Teacher Studio 1321 N. Capitol St. Phone 8192 eves I I ' SSaMammmStmmmSSSSSSSSSSaamlmmmmSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS aaBSSBVBSW"?. f. -..'vanArra f AM T . 7' ' . 'JO': ' .'.-,. "TS SSaSSa m in.- ia nnn i t t SALEM Th Slatomman, Sqfom. Oregon Minks Are Hosts Mr. and Mrs. Roy Mink were hosts for an informal party Sat urday night at their South 15th street home for a few of their friends. A buffet supper was served with an evening of cards following. Covers were placed for Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Heater, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Fitts, Mr. and Mrs. Loring Grier and the Minks. Salem high school band and or chestra parents will meet Wednes day night at the high school mu sic room at 8 o'clock. A N NOUN CEMENT Miller's Department Store will be closed this morning until 11:30 a. m. as a tribute to the late Mr. Loren Wise, whose funeral will be held at the Clough-Barrick Fu neral Parlor at 10:30 a. m. For a limited time we 25'; discount on our old low prices. We are including in this special the following: Navy blankets. Army blan kets, our own grey blankets, one large table of fall & winter coatings, plain cloth robes, wool work pants, lie sure coats, rain coats & mackinaws. Thos. Kay Woolen Mill Co. 260 So. JfnTi1 sal; '::fi Wit EH! L Tu day, January 14 1947 3 Salem eoeds pledged to sorori ties on the Oregon State college campus at the close of winter term rush period were Charlotte Reeves. Alpha Delta Pi; Veva June Camp, Alpha Omicron Pi; and Arleen Frogley, Delta Zeta. DALLAS Mr. and Mrs. C. I Crider are spending a month in Guatemala on a combined busi ness and pleasure trip. The en tire trip is being made by plane. ! Mr. and Mrs. Crider and daughter, I Jane, spent sometime in Mexico ' City last year. i Eastern Star social elnb meet ing slated for this afternoon has j been cancelled because of the death of Mrs. Walter Denton, sis- ' tor of Mrs. Milton L. Meyers, a 1 charter member. Woolens 10 lo 25 - Discounts - will offer a genuine 10' to 12th St PHONE 9205