esday Rainbow Girls Installation Tu At a formal public installation ceremony Tuesday night at the Masonic Temple Miss Margaret Hildreth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer L. Hildreth, win be installed as worthy advisor of Cbadwick Assembly, Order of Rainbow for Girls. Members of Masonic orders and friends are in vited to the 8 o'clock ceremony. The installing officers include Joan Neal, worthy advisor; Lo An ne Mundinger, recorder: - Arlene Sneddon, chaplain; Patricia Sex ton, marshall; Beverly Walls, mu sician, and Mrs. Arnold S. John son, mother advisor. Officers to be installed with Miss Hildreth are Eleanor. Mlezl- va, worthy associate advisor; Pat ty Johnson, charity; Janice Gille spie, hope; Ada Hartman, faith; Ann Hanson, chaplain; Mary Ste vens, drill leader; Susan Grier, love; Joyce Stettler, religion; Shirley MeCauley, nature; Shirley Faber, immortality; Sally Merrill, fidelity; Nancy Bone, patriotism; Louise Henderson, service; Shar on Searcy, confidential observer; Barbara Sharpe, outer .observer. Choir Members Carol Williams, musician; Eile en Osko, choir director; Janice Wood, historian; Karlene Quistad, publicity; Patricia Gilmore, proj ect chairman. Donna Haugen, Peg gy Reid, Janice Roseler, Priscilla Payne, Arlene Sneddon, Marilyn Shields, Betty Johnson, Ila War ren, Carol West and Janice Wood, choir members. The program for the installa tion ceremony includes a reading by Roger Moorehead, solos by Pe ter Van Horn and Lo Anne Mun dinger. Ushers for -the evening include Shirley Ezell and Sherry Filsinger. In charge of the gift table will be Beverly Mocabee and Shirley Freeman. A reception will follow the in stallation ceremony and assisting in the dining room will be Mrs, Paul Griebenow, Mrs. Oscar. Wil liams, Mrs. Elmer Hanson, Mrs. vv;;- '.:;. sc f t Miss Margctret Hildreth, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer L. Hildreth, who will Be installed as worthy advisor of Chadwick Assembly, Order of Rainbow for Girls Tues day night at the Masonic Temple at a public installation ceremony. (Jesten-Miller Studio). r-?vxn m?'i'..f" W H. Merrill, Mrs. William Nel son, Mrs. Norris Stevens, Mrs. Loring Grier and Mrs. Emery Wood. A short business meeting pre ceding the installation is slated for 7 p.m. Members of Chapter BC, PEO, will meet Tuesday night at the home of Mrs. Louis Anderson, 250 Ewald Avenue, at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. George H. Swift is the assisting hostess. The program will be cer amics by Mrs. Anderson. Salem Sojourners will meet at the Salem Woman's Club on Thursday for a dessert luncheon followed by election of officers for the coming term. Mrs. Dar win Sermon is chairman for the day and those assisting will be Mrs. Stanton Zelmer, Mrs. Felix Dilger, Mrs. Del Shields, and Mrs. Bob Brooks. The Nebraska Club will meet for a no-host luncheon on Wed nesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Ben Randall, 1840 West Nob Hill, at 12:30 p.m. - ' - ' " ," ( -Lp j -" m. f ' n . ' ' , t - "It F or up-to-the-minute V T: - ' ', " needlework fashions, ao X. . "X'l- T ? ' ; V cessories, toys and gifts, sees?$ j ''X Wheeler Needlecroft l l ly " 4 Whether you crochet, seiv, embroider, quilt, hook rugs 3r weave on huch, see the greatest selection of need leer aft designs day by day in our columns. Laura Wheeler designs are made by the largest company serving readers by mail to assure you the widest choice of the best needlecraft designs! Turn now to the Laura Wheeler Needlecraft Design-for today and follow it daily. X x ; y-feaisaTlMSaiaMri-h AAUW Board Meets in Salem Mrs. Thornton Names Chairmen An important date for American Association of University Women throughout the state is the annual state board meet ing which convenes in Salem on Saturday, Sept. 26. Mrs. Rob ert Y. Thornton, Salem, state president, will preside nt her first meeting since her election in the spring. Newly appoint ed committee chairmen and presidents of the 27 AAUW branches in . the state will be here for the meeting. The sessions 'will be held in the conference room of the State Library Building beginning at 9 ajn. A feature of the morning session will be a discussion of the national convention at Minne apolis by the seven Oregon dele gates. Theme of the meeting is "Education of a Free People.- Luncheon will - be served at 12:30 at the Marion Hotel with Charles A. Sprague, former Gov ernor and former member of the U. S. delegation to the United Nations, as the guest speaker. Mrs. Arthur Sprague, president of the Salem branch, will give the address of welcome. The afternoon session will in clude a workshop panel of the new state chairmen of the various subject fields, plus small discus sion groups of special benefit to new branch presidents. Women participating in the panel discus sion will hold a planning meeting Friday night at the Candalaria Heights home of Mrs. Thornton. Four Chairmen from Salem Mrs. Thornton's officers in clude Mrs. R Willard Duncan, Klamath Falls, vice-president; Mrs. Thomas W. Churchill, Salem, corresponding secretary; Mrs. Lester E. Stutz, Corvallis, record ing secretiry; and Mrs. Earl A. Bopp, Ontario, treasurer. State committee chairmen ap pointed by Mrs. Thornton include four from Salem; Miss Eloise Ebert, international relations; Mrs. Paul L. Patterson, by-laws; Mrs. John O. Burcham, standards and recognition of colleges; and Mrs. Harold A. Rosebraugh, rep resentative on the women's prison council. Other chairmen are as follows: Betty Lou Dunlop, Ashland, edu cation; Mrs. H. H. Snoop, Pendle ton, social studies; Mrs. Joe Z. Hillis, The Dalles, creative arts; Mrs. Jerry P. Tobin, Medford, status of women; Miss Dorothy SaremaL Milwaukie, membership; Mrs. Robert R. Gordon, Tilla mook, fellowship; Miss Maurine Laber, Portland, legislation; Mrs. Arthur J. Larson, Portland; pub licity; Mrs. R. W. Duncan, Kla math Falls, program coordinator; Miss Mozelle Hair, Eugene, his torian; Mrs. Robert Stearns, Port land, radio and television; Mrs. G. R. Flood, Corvallis, roster of qualified women; Miss Nina Zoe Kitts. Eugene, recent graduates. Mrs. Paul Buck, Klamath Falls, finance; Oenone Shaw, Portland, governor s committee on children and youth; Mrs. Marsh F. Beall, Portland, representative on state committee of civil defense; and Mrs. Carl Brandenf els, St Helens, parliamentarian. Mrs. Robert Y. Thornton. Salem, state president of the American Association of University Women, who has announced her committee appointments prior to the state board meeting to be held in Salem on Sept. 26. Alpha Oris Will Meet The Alpha Chi Omega alumnae will hear reports of the national conventioA held in Banff at the first fall meeting Monday night at the home of Mrs. Roy Har land, 4135 Rivercrest Drive, at 8 p.m. Mrs. M. Theodore Madsen Jr., president of the . alumnae group, will give highlights of the June convention, and Mrs. Vernon Gilmore, district alum nae chairman, will also give an account of the convention. Assist ing hostesses are Mrs. George Seymour, Mrs. Robert Phillips Jr. Miss Helen Lane and Mrs. Gil more. All Alpha Chis in the city and vicinity are invited to at tend and those wishing transpor tation are asked to- call Mrs. Gilmore. Pattern 45 " fro 15 t : a a I ! J 1220 A striking panel effect seems to button right on the bodice of this beautiful side-zipped basic! Softly curved to give you a slim- through-the middle look. Whirl through fall and winter in this you'll like the way it praises your figure suits your life to a T! Pattern 4549: Misses Sizes 12. 14, 16, 18, 20. Size 18 takes 4Sk yards 39-inch fabric. This Dattern easv to 1 u' m. pl to iew. U teMed for fit. R com p let Illustrated instruction. Send Thlrtr-flva cent in -ina for this pattern add ft cents for each pattern for lst-class mailinc Send to Ann Adams, car of The Ore son Statesman. Pattern Dept. P.O. Box S7I0. Chicago SO, BL Print your NAME, ADDRESS with ZONK; Hello, this is Mary again. Say, you'll be interested to know that part of the wallpaper and fabric samples which I wrote about last week have started to arrive. Just yesterday the Museum Collection of matching fabrics and wallpa per, one of the hand print wall paper volumes, and a big batch of the samples came. Half of the samples are yet to arrive, but it shouldn't be long. I told you I knew I'd be thrilled at seeing the samples again we put one correlated group out for display-tones of Venetian pins: and charcoal. The color of the pink denotes the theme of the pattern of the chintz "Grand Canal" a romantic scene of the canals and gondolas in Venice the famous city of bridges. This pattern could be used for side draperies in a grey and charcoal living room. The subtle tones of the Venetian pink could be re peated in draw draperies of a sheer silk casement which would cover the glass area and filter the light of day and hide the black of night With this combina tion we put a beautiful textured matelasse in pink and' charcoal which could be used for uphol stery on a pair of chairs in the room. Another print in the new group is on an imported batiste. Almost every fabric line showed some ury, light-line prints on batiste a fine, fine cotton, as washable as your finest , hankies. This one is called "Golden Apples," and another is "Little Bouquets. Something that will just tickle you is called "Gay Nineties" and has little modern drawings of Victorian tables, chairs and lamps that were in your Aunt Mathilda's parlor. It depjets all the furbe lows and what-nots ' of the gas light era. Use the one with the pink background for your bath room curtains, and paint to the colors in the fabric. Then a white bird-cage planted with greens, and an antique picture frame for the mirror would just finish it off. Don't be afraid, now dare to do something really individual. Why , you could even have pink shutters at the lower sash of your window! Might as well ex pose your family to something diffrerent than that green or peach bathroom you've been liv ing with for ten years- wouldn't you have fun shocking them? Come on down and be exposed yourself well dream up some thing just for you! See you next week, " Mary Thomas Interior Decorator ROBERTS BROS. "1 -':-Tfn?V7 ' s For an Exclusive Hair Style . to fit Your Personality visit ricli of Klew lJorh i t Willamette Valley's Most Complete v Iturty Institution ;v : 251 a liberty Dial 34921 " - . 1 ; ". Joan Nowcomb ; Vi cto r Cobos -: Wed Saturday Mrs. James C Drury is an nouncing the marriage of her only daughter. Miss Join La Vergne Newcomb, to Victor Cobos of Los Angeles, which was quietly solemnized on Saturday morning in the study of the First Christian Church. The "Rev. Donald B. Payne offi ciated at the 10 o'clock nuptials before members of the immediate family. ' For her wedding the bride chose a mink brown crepe gown with bolero jacket and a mocha brown ostrich feather hat She pinned a corsage of green orchids to her ensemble. The bride was unattended and James C. Drury Jr. served as best man for Mr. Cobos. The newlyweds were honored at a Weddinr hreakfast at fh Marion Hotel following the cere mony. After a wedding trip along the Oregon coast the couDle will be at home at "Half-a-Hill," occupying the Drury residence while Prof, and Mrs. Drury are in New York this winter. jStrtetman, Salem, Ore.. Sunday. Sept 20. 195 (Sec 23 CLUB CALENDAR " MONDAT Willamette Shrine, Whit Shrine of 4 jfruMjera, Masonic Temple, a p.m. -Bethel 35. Job's Daughters meet at Scottish Hit Tempi. 730 p.m. TUESDAY Rainbow Girls installation. Masonic Temple. 8 pjn business meeuni, 7 P-m. I Chadwick Chapter, OES, Masonic Temple, 1:15 . dessert luncheon, j . :! The Alpha Delta Pi alumnae will be entertained Monday night at the home of Mrs. Al Pfeifer. 440 West Missouri St, at 8 o'clock. All alumnae in Salem and vicinity are welcome to attend. SEE THE FABULOUS ' PFAFF Sewing Machine at MYRONS 153 S. Liberty . 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