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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1949)
fJU-Th gcrtev Qroyry gundor, QT WlW ' " I'i.'! -1-1 J !.( jtt.c ,u .oniiiM. jj Seen and Heard . . By JERYMS ENGLISH nrmzsiiNO umi . . eomes from Priscilla Walsh Craif ruin. Joseph), who lives In St John, Newfoundland, where her lieutenant colonel husbandM with the air transport command ... 'the writes her mother, Mrs. Ray moad Walsh, of .attending parties in honor of Govarnor General and Viscountess Alexander of Tunis, who visited at St Johns . . . . First a large garden party at Gov ernment House attended by 1200 people . . . two bands playing fcGod Save the King" as the gen eral and countess strolled up and down the walks followed by la dle in waiting and aides . . . . Local citizens of St Johns wore rey toppers, canes, frock coats nd grey trousers for the occasion . . . Priecfua's favorite costume for the afternoon was worn by a clergyman which consisted of long black stockings, round black hat, long purple coat and umbrella . . The following day the Craigs were chosen, along with eight other of ficers ana tneir wives to auena the review and presentation at the base In honor of the royal couple . . . After the review there was party at the Officers club where Priscilla met the couple and had a long talk with them . ; The countess even wears hats like Queen Elizabeth arid even looks like her ... she talked about her three children, most interest ing to Prisdlla, who has two daughters . . . In the evening the Craigs attended ball In hon or of the Couple and as the invita tions said decorations the men and women were loaded down with all sorts of huge crosses and! ribbons . . . The countess wore a beau tiful diamond tiara, the design of huge roses and leaves. ' HEADED ' SOUTH . J!. The National Dental convention open ing next Sunday in San Trends co will attract a number of Sa lem people, many planning trips IP 1 M -w and o UJ.. V for eee V - NIW PATTIKN IN : ' IP III NAMI g EVENING TA ID 'TRAM MARKS tfOlWtfUtd. 'a'" et afw4 la stt yew telle wtth Ms lovely see setters ef Mp-eanreJ floral (Ma. Sseom ens' forfct protect mm m trtre evtrltf of solid sir for long wear. Wedding ledjet atioed , . If rWe arvlea let SSM7I. Set Iventai Star today st I Join our Christmas Lay-Away Club A small deposit holds your gift or open an aeeount, pay as low as $1.00 weekly No carrying oharfcl farther eouth after the sessions alose . . . 1 Dr. and Mrs. Harold OUngar are driving down the end ei me weex xor ine convention ana will be at the Sir Francis Drake They Plan to attend the Ore- C State-Stanford game on Octo 22 and will spend a week at Carmel and on the Monterey pen insula playing golf ... Dr. and Mrs. Esau Brunk are driving south on Friday to attend the convention . . . going: on south to Carmel, Monterey, and Santa Crui wlw Tosemite, Lake Tahoe, Reno and Virginia City on their Itinerary . . . Dr. Brunk plans to Visit several begonia growers on the peninsula . . . Mere ef aame . . Dr. and Mrs. Floyd Utter also leave Fri day for. the convention in the bay city . . . While there they will visit their son and daughter-in- law, the Robert Utters . . . Dr. Utter will return north in a week, but Mrs. Utter will go on south to Los Angeles for a month's visit with relatives and friends . . Dr. and Mrs. S. D. Wiles and Dr. and Mrs. John R. Wood are driv ing down for the convention, plan ning to visit other California points before returning home in ten days . , . Dr. and Mrs. George Terry ma will1 also go south for the convention and later will go on to Los Angeles for a visit . Three dental assistants planning to attend sessions at the conven tion are Miss Fern Hobbensief ken. Miss Dorothy Baue and Mrs. Hazel Dixon . . -. Dr. and Mrs. W. C Heringer are driving down Friday, for the sessions . . . Fellowinx the son . . . The C. H. Ostrins and son, Richard, and her mother, Mrs. Helen Good enough, left Wednesday by car for Desert Hot Springs and Palm Springs, going by way of Reno . . '. Richard will spend the win ter at Desert Hot Springs . . . and the other three will go on to Los Angeles, where the Ostrins will attend the national ice cream makers convention . . . They will return by way of San Francisco in mid-November ... HOME AGAIN ... is Mrs. Kenneth Potts, who went to Chi cago the first of September to at tend the national PEO convention at the Stevens hotel . . . Over 1300 delegates, overwhelming to Jean, who was attending her first large convention . . .A formal banquet a highlight of the week . . . During the dessert coVse the lights dimmed as the chefs brought in a huge iced American flag and next the PEO emblem on a cart . . . followed by a hundred waiters bringing In frozen pastel cakes, each on top of lighted dish ... a cake for each table, which the waiters cut. and served individually . . . From Chicago Jean went on to Roches ter and Philadelphia to visit her brothers and their families . One weekend was spent in Wash lngton, D. C, where she visited with Lt Col. and Mrs. Robert Tay lor and Keith HalL formerly of Salem ... The Taylors now settled in their newly purchased home in Arlington . . . On the phone she talked to Rosalind Van Winkle Melton ,. . . Roane with the government In Washington, D. C, the Meltons have just fin ished building a new home in one of the suburbs ... A BUST WEEKEND ... as we were in Portland, friends told us of the lovely at home given last Saturday by the Albert C. uraggs for their daughter, CarrolL home on leave from the Waves . . . Several hundred people calling ... A crowd arriving right at the opening hour of 7 o dock as many going on to the Capital Card club, r. I f-' u, t -. -. ' " ' - f 9 t f :. .- l j "i t - - t " .' .U ' f I to..; : ' 9 ' 'h . " r v- A f r - ,a$ -- j ' - : i - . Pononf IfflfflftlfHlU J V ' i Introduced today as the fifth in our series of president of women's, organization in the city it Mrs. Ruth Hemdon, regent of Chemeketa chapter, 'Daughters of the Americxm Revolution. The Salem chapter was organized on November 26, 1915 and will celebrate its 34th anniversary at a banquet on November 4. The chapter roster now numbers 85 and to be eligible for membership one must be a direct descendant of someone who took part or gave aid in the American Rev olution. Regular meetings are held the first Saturday of each month. Main projects of Chemeketa chapter are advance ment of American Indian and approved schools, national defense, Good Qtizenship Pilgrimage for nigh school girls" with annual award of $100 bond and conservation. (Jesten Miller photo). Job's. Daughters Installation and Tlllioum dance . . . all ooming in their formal gowns . . . one couple even coining after the par ty at 11 o'clock when the young set arrived . . . ail ending way after 1 o'clock . . . everyone asking Carroll, who wore her new navy uniform with two stripes, if she liked the navy . . . she Is sure she enthusiastically answered the question three hundred times . . . A red, white and blue color scheme, earned out in the decor ations ... Sunday's saarrlage . . when Jeanne Myers, wearing a hand some ice blue satin and lace gown, became Ensign Henry B 1 d d 1 e Johnson's bride . . The First Presbyterian church the setting . . . the late afternoon sun shin ing through the stained glass windows ... all maroon flowers and large blue bows the decor . . repeated la the gowns of the at tendants . . . The newlyweds greeting their guests In the nar thcx, the reception in the church social rooms .... Later the new lyweds going out to the Terrace Farm" home of the bride's par ents. Dr. and Mrs. Burton Myers, where a few relatives and inti mate friends toasted the couple and watched them open their gifts before departing for San Fran cisco . . . Little Boy Welcomed Mr. and Mrs. Lester DenBeste (JoAnne Lang) are announcing the birth of a son, Friday at the Salem Memorial hospital. He weighed I lbs. lS-oc. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Lang, Salem, and Mr. and Mrs. William DenBeste ef Craw ford, Colo. Great grandparents are the Rev. and Mrs. F. C. Taylor of Salem. Mr. and Mrs. DenBeste re turned this summer from Denver, Colo, where both attended the Denver university. ToFeteiNew Members Chaiwkk chapter. OES social afternoon dub will be entertained at 1:11 oesieTt ltmeh dtesrd party Tuesday at the Masonic temple. The hostess committee in cludes Mesdames F. A. Wheatley, Frank J. Jirak. 3. JL England, F. K. Wllhelm, Clarence M. Bower. Jas per BarreuV4 F. C Rock. Jnltus Pincus, Cora Smith, tfrie LuehrJ. A. Oehler, Edith KeH tad JLd. Severin. t 4 i . The Salem branch of the Ameri can Association of University Wo men, will honor new and prospec tive members at a meeting and tea on Saturday. 'October 15, at o'clock at Baxter hall on the Willamette university campus. A toroeram Is being arranged by Miss Mildred Christenson and the speaker will be announced later. Miss Mabel Robertson, chairman of the membership committee, and her committee members. Miss Marjorie Chester and Mrs. John R. Goldsmith, will introduce new members of the association. 1 Chairmen of the AAUW study i groups will outline their programs at the meeting. The association sponsors study .groups In inter national relations, literature, child study, social studies and travel and also a recent graduate social group. A new gardening stuay group Is being- organised for the: first time this year. The associa tion may also" sponsor groups in interior decoration, art. French end Spanish. Membership m sev eral of these groups is open to wo men in the Salem area who desire to participate in the education pro gram of the association oui ere not eligible for membership. Miss Hise Schroeder, president, has announced that all women in the community who are interested in membership in the association are invited to attend. Women with approved degrees from AAUW approved Institutions are eligible to national membership. Women not currently registered as under graduates who have completed, as regularly' matriculated students In any college or university as ap proved, at least two full years of non-professional work are eligible for associate membership in the Salem branch. Tea te Fellow Meeting Following the meeting, tea will be served. Mrs. Custer K. Ross and Mrs. George Rossman will pour. Hostesses, appointed by Mrs. Gordon Carl, hospitality chairman, include Miss Ida Mae Smith, Miss Marv Ann Foley. Miss Jessica Kinsey, and Mesdames C E. Gray, Maynard Nelson, uoraon u. leo nard, Howard I. Sargent, T. W. Churchill. Wilbur S. Ankney and Norman W. Frees. j Mrs. W. O. Mills, decorations chairman for the branch, has ap Dointed Mrs. George E. Allen as chairman of decorations for the tea with Mrs. Ellen A. Fisher as sisting. Spinsters will be eatertalned Monday night at the Market street home of Mrs. Carl O. Collins with Mrs. James H. Nicholson, jr., and Miss Esther Baird assisting. Miss Betty Jean Manolee will preside at the meeting, at which plans will be made for the fall and win ter activities of the philanthropic group. Miss Julia Jehasea. wbe Is ea the faculty at Lewis and Clark college, Portland, is spending the weekend in Salem with her mo ther, Leona Johnson. XXS&L" " V;':. pm ttXHB two totkldi Is"! ifryle-rlght stripes eea ia tM mi sea Baa icombmations, maki Hits feather etieM It favorite for laH. Tiny estieea siei Icellar match thote ofl leather seN. iliiet 19-11. 1 farl inH wialer s rm- e. s. tmi. o Smart Shop 111 N. Liberty hip-proportlonbd ; tizoi tor your basic figure fypol n. J- n f si -; of wrvmfl ptk Now yowr fovorite nAbokHi foendotlo wiHi the potenfed sCdiea bock that "will not ride-vp"- hat 'added evee another feature to give yow eore floMerino, comfortable control. We have scJenKficony designed It kt three bask figure type. Whether you ere a trroighf; overage or full hip figure, there Is a nu-bach oH-ln-ae to correspond to vowr figvre and fit vow eerfecwy. Nwde. freshrvnk brocaded totton bofitte. All $ie 14 to 42 - STtAIOMT Mt if HfMc hmi weiit hiei U let te iachM. Uah k 14- Uctl itl SOW. 1 nn ' cmnr All H II eiffefe s I Mi B,'lKV Ht vitl m4 kirn U ewer 10- fw eM r ' rarwrio siiomo sac' jjt I aVoCat Ifcejt attotJaV M . lipr If lhw aXtV mH umuf k fNrf sUCh sag. Ml- ' . . ; Plenty of Freo) Parking Shop in Air Conditioned Comfort Store Hours. 9:30 A M. to 5:30 P. M. 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Late Model .1 SO Y ftfranTT Awn, rTmrtTPTic" im una rrrrrn CATfcrnrrrnin iiuiuimnu ifiiaiiisHii uuiiuiuiAiabi uxaatua iiviiuh; ....... 9fK MANY OTHEBS TO CHOOSE FROM Friendly "Term '4. . I Free Delivery WLlllIEIIE tALLEI'S LEADING APF1IAKCE & HOME FCBKISHEHS SALEM 0REG0W CITY r Open - l ' Friday lill 9 p.ix 'f-'j m-m v i l e)