Capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1919-1980, December 21, 1925, Image 5

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    MONDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1925
THE CAPITAL JOURNAL, SALEM, OREGON
PAGE FIVE
Society, Clubs and Music
Edited hv noanllii Ifflhur. Phnno til
University
Musicians
Coming
Arrangements hnvo been made
by Jamea Leake, concert manager
of the University of Oregon, with
tho locnl theater management, for
tho annual concert in Salem by
the University glee clubs and or
chestra. On March 22 the men's
and women's glee clubs and the
orchestra, under ie direction of
John Starlc Evans, will give a
Joint concert "at tho llellig thea
ter. Sololftte have not yet been
announced but it Is considered
likely that the baritone soloist
will be Eugene Carr, new member
of the faculty of the school of
music this yenr,
Last spring tho concert by the
two glee clubs and the orchestra
was considered one of the out
standing of the entire year In
Bed em musical circles and the re
turn engagement this year le wel
comed by concert goers.
The engagement of Mies Bar
bara Stanfield, daughter of Sen
ator and Mrs. Robert N. Stan
field, and the. niece of Mrs. W. H.
Lytlo of Salem, to Henry Teasdnlc
Dunn waa announced at a lunch
eon at the Washington, D. C,
apartments of Senator and Mrs.
Stanfield at one o'clock today.
Twenty two prominent girls were
guests including two Portland,
Oregon, friends of Miss Stan
field, Mips Elsie Bristol and Miss
Dorothy Shea. Miss Bristol is the
house guest of the Stanfields dur
ing the holidays.
According to press dispatches
from Washington, the luncheon
table 'was centered with Ameri
can Beauty roses and a corsage of
bride's roses at each place car
ried cards announcing the wed
ding. . Miss Stanfield and Mr. Dunn
will be married on the afternoon
of January 21 at old St. John's
church in Washington. A -reception
nt the Stanfield apartments
will follow.
Mies Stanfield Is well known in
Portland and in Salem and visit
ed her0 during the past summer.
She made her debut in Washing
ton last year and recently has
been studying music in New York.
Mr. Dunn is a member of an
old Jacksonville, Florida, family.
He Is In business in New York.
They will make their home there.
"Accessories t?ut Change n
House into a Home" was the sub
ject of the address made by Mrs.
J. C. Van Etten of Portland, on
Saturday before a luncheon meet
ing of the Salem brancW of the
American Association of Univer
sity Women. The luncheon was
given at the Elks Temple on State
street, with covers placed for bIx
ty four.
Mm. Van Etten, who is leader
of the Interior decorating study
section of tbe Portland branch of
the A. A. U. W. covered briefly
the importance of correct acces
sories In the home.
The membership committee of
tho local branch reported twelve
new members during a short bus
iness meeting.
Since -the Christmas seal booth
sale opened December 1 more than
?2300 worth of Christmas seals
have been sold In the downtown
booths of Portland alone, Mrs.
Elizabeth Cosgriff, seal sale
chairman, states. Sales have var
ied from a penny to a dollar, the
saleswomen, members of the wo
men's organizations of the city,
all of whom gave volunteer ser
vice, have reported.
From Washington, D. C, comes
the word that Mrs. McNary, wife
of Senator McNary of Oregon, en
tertained at a luncheon Sunday,
and also after the Wednesday
morning musicale. Mrs. McNary
was one of the honor guests at the
forum dinner of the League of
Women Voters and is a member
of the reception committee and
the committee on luncheons and
dinners for the local league.
The woman's foreign mission
ary society of Jason Lee church
will meet Wednesday afternoon
beginning at two thirty at the
homo of Mrs. Thomas Acheson,
1035 Hood street. A special pro
gram has been prepared.
Miss Mary Ward, a student at
the University of Oregon at Eu
gene, arrived Saturday and is
the guest for several days of her
Bister, Miss Clara Ward at the
Smallwood home on north Six
teenth street. They will spend
Christmas with their parents, Mr.
and Mrs. C. M. Ward at Sand
Lake.
The Amicltian club members
entertained at a "kid" party at
the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. R.
White on Saturday evening. The
livlg rooms were attractively
decorated with Christmas novel
ties of all kinds and a number of
children's games were enjoyed
during the evening. Santa Clans
left a gift for each of tbe guests.
A buffet supper was served.
Those present were Dr. and
Mrs. C. A. Downs, Mr. and Mrs.
Kirhy Ross. Mr. and Mrs. Milton
Eckman, Mr. and Mrs. Knight
Pearcy, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. In
grey, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sultl
Tan, Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Rowland,
Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Tripp. Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Zlnn and Mr. and
Mrs. H. R. White.
Mr. and Mrs. William Parker
were In Albany yesterday to at
tend tbe birthday dinner given in
honor of Mr. Parker's aunt, Mrs.
Mary Parker on her ninetieth
birthday. Tho dbnner was given
at the home of Mrs. Parker's son,
Hiram Parker, In north Albany.
More than twenty five relatives
were present.
P Grandmother Nabs Bandits
fyf'J . t f; , g
'MS? S-EIF T5ITI KTG E TS g,
The home of Dr. and Mrs. P. L.
Otter was the ecene of an attract
ive affair on Saturday evening
when tho 6ix men who are mem
bore of a dinner bridpe club en
tertained at dinner honoring tho
group of matrons who are mem
bers of the club.
Covers were placed for Dr. and
Mre. C. 13. Bates, Mrs. E. S. White,
I'rof. and Mrs. M. B. Peck, Mr.
and Mrs. William Hamilton, Mr.
and Mre. Ray L, Smith, R S.
White and Dr. and Mrs. P. L.
Utter.
...
Mre. H. L. Doeler entertained
her bridge club at her homo ton
Friday afternoon. Additional
guests were. Mrs. Paul Bassctt,
Mrs. Arthur Loder, Mrs. Charles
Chandrer, Mre. Larry Blaledcll
and Mrs. M. A. Butler.
Members of tho club are Mrs.
Vern Shepard, Mrs. S. G. Hlnkle,
Mrs. Li. u. Demarest, Mrs. A. J.
Jacobs, Mrs. Dart Kenyon, Mrs.
A. 11. Wilson and the hostess.
Mrs. B06ler.
High honors for the afternoon
were won by Mrs. Paul Baasett.
The consolation award went to
M rs. Darl Kenyon. A late after'
noon lunch was served in tho din
ing -rooni of the Bosler homo on
north Twentieth street.
The nexs meeting of the club
will be held on January 8 at the
home of Mrs. L. C. Demarest, 140
north Twenty-first street.
Miss Edith Ross and Miss Flor
ence Ravenscratt, members of tho
faculty of the junior high school
Leaping on the running board of a speeding car, Mrs.
Bessie Ellinger, of New York, shown here with her grand
daughter, helped halt three men suspected of robbing a
taxi driver. She was commended by court for her bravery.
(Uy ProfiKbior C. lii. A. Wlnalow,
Yale University, Member Gorgos
Memorial Institute.)
Mistaken Ideas about fresh air
are coating the taxpayers of the1
United States hundreds of thous
ands of dollars every your and are
decreasing the efficiency and un
dermining the health of millions
of school children.
A generation ago it was believed
that the harmful effects of bad air
were due to some mysterious or
ganic poisons which It was sup
posed to contain. To r&raove the
supposed danger from these hypo
thetical poisons, mechanical sys
tems of ventilation were designed
to flood the school room with a
vast volume of air, and laws were
drawn up and are now actually in
force in some twenty states, re
quiring a system which will sup
ply 30 cubic foot of air for every
child in every school room.
Unfortunately for tho ' propo
nents of such laws the progress of
scientific study long ngo .demon
strated that tho whole theory ci
organic poisons as tho cause of the
harmful effect of bad air must be
thrown into the discard. It wf.s
proved that the overwhelmingly
important factor In had ventilation
was not the preosnce of chemical
poisons but the Influence of hot,
-jtill air upon the surfaces of the
vast, volume of hot air, which must
necessarily be highly heated in or
der to avoid drafts is therefore
only jumping from Mie frying pan
into the fire, Ja an almost literal
souse. What we really need Is not
a great volume of hot air but a
small f!ow of cold air; and, in the
living room, the office and the
school room ihis end can generally
bo best attained, not by mechani
cal systems but by Intelligent use
of windows and heat sources. In
many crowded factory workrooms
and in auditoria fan ventilation
may, however, often be essential.
The most convenient practical
test under ordinary conditions is
the thermometer. Is there a ther
mometer in your living room, in
your office or workroom, in the
school room where your children
study? Is the temperature always
kept at' 63 degrees or below? If
so, you and your children are en-
joylug tha first essential benefit
of fresh air. If not, you and they
are suffering in efficiency and in
health, day by day and hour by
hour. A study of 10,000 New
York city school children showed
that In rooms averaging over 6
degree's there was 70 per cent more
respiratory disease than in rooms
averaging below 67 degrees.
Watch tiho thermomter. If It
gets over 68 degrees turn off tbe
heat or open the windows or both
If you can secure this end by the
use of a thermometer and a little
common senso you are getting
"fresh air": and If a costly fan
ventilating system is not securing
this end, It Is Failing of Its real
purpose.
The Progressive
will entertain at a Christmas
dance in Ierby hail tomorrow
evening. A number of additional
guests have been bidden to the
affair. Among the features plan
ned Is a Santa Claus and distri
bution of gifts.
Miss Edna Poehle, member of
the staff at (rood Samaritan hos
pital in Portland, will arrive on
Thursday "to spend the Christmas
holidays with her sister, Mrs. F.
L. Utter.
Annual election of officers at
the meeting of the woman's union
of the First Congregational
church on Friday afternoon at
the home of Rev. and Mrs.
Charles Ward on Center street,
resulted In the reelection of prac
tically all of the officers who
served last year. The complete list
Is as follows: president, Mrs.
Mark McCallister; first vice pres
ident and head of the missionary
school, Mrs. T. S. McKenzie; as
sistant missionary leader, Mrs. W.
D. Clarke: second vice president,
Mrs. H. V. Bross; secretary, Dr.
Fannie A. Brown; treasurer, Mies.
Edith Hazzard.
The organization Is broad in Its
scope and field of endeavor and j
Is very strong financially, iast i
year more than $1600 passed'
through the hands of the treas
urer. Each year $500 goes to the.
foreign missionary work and the
remainder is used locally. More
than $600 wart paid on a new
carnef for the church during the
past year and it is planned to pay
$300 on the carpet during tne
coming year. This money is rais-j
ed through the $3 annual dues,
which are assessed and by the
thank offering and Easter offer
ing services.
Mrs. McCallister appointed a
ways and means committee which
includes In addition to the offi
cers, Mre. C. H. Fake, Mrs. E. h.
Bonnell, Mre. W. I. Staley and'
Mrs. E. M. Ilotfnell. This commit
tee will consider at once a melh-
dancing club od of raising funds for the activi
ties of the organization.
Miss Margaret Tucker had
her housp guest on Friday and
Saturday her cousin, Mies Olive
Mettler of Portland. Miss Mettler
was enroute to Portland from Eu
gene where she Is a freshman at
the university.
.
Mies Dorothy Ostrander, mem
ber of the faculty of the Falls City
high school, Is spending the holi
days with her parents, Mr. and
Mrs, Edward Ostrander.
Mrs. S. Taylor Jones, who dur
ing the past term has served as
house mother at tho Beta Kappa
sorority house on the Oregon Ag
ricultural college campus, arriv
ed In Salem Saturday to remain
until the beginning of the winter
term at the college.
f LEAR YOUR SKIN
of ditfiguring blotches and
irritation. Um
esino!
V.V.V.V
Closing out our Genuine
Yyralin
In white and brown.
Some pieces worth ten
dollars.
Closing them out at
Si e25
$ and over 1000 pieces to J
J choose from J
Schaefer's I
l Drug Store I
: Yellow Front Phone 197
135 N. Commercial St.
The Penslar Store
W.WV.V.V.
at Bend, arrived last night to
spend the holidays with Dr. and
Mrs. Corydon Blodgett and Mr.
and Mre. Arthur Utloy, on the
Wallace road. Miss Rosa Is a cous
in of Mrs. Blodgett and Mrs. Utley
and makes her homo with them.
Miss Rovcnscraft'a borne la in
Montana. v i
Brush College Helpers wero
hostesses at a Christmas party at
the homo of Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Crawford on Thursday evening
with husbands and children of
the club members the - honor
guests. More than eighty enjoyed
an evening of music and other
program features.
Mre. Karl Horritt, president of
the Holpers, presided during a
short business meeting. Program
numbers included the singing of
a cradle song by the little chil
dren in the group, a Christmas
story by Mrs. Paul Wallace, a
solo by Miss Helen Gorsline, a
short talk by Mrs. Arthur Utley,
and the singing of Christmas car
ols by the entire group. Games
were enjoyed during the remain
der of the evening.
The living rooms of the Craw
ford homo were decorated with
holly and mistletoe for the occas
ion. Mrs. W. S. McCall and Mrs.
Charles McCarter were In charge
at the refreshments. Mrs. Fred
Ewing was in charge of the enter
tainment with Mrs. U. J. Laymen
directing the devotional part of
tho program.
..
The annual Christmas meeting
of the Lincoln MeKinley parent
teacher association will be held
at the MeKinley school on Tues
day evening, December 22. Christ
mas carols will be sung and two
one act plays will be given by
the children. Exhibits of sewing
and cooking will be mado at this
time and refreshments will be
served by the cooking class.
An engagement announcement
made In a recent ltwue of the San
Francisco Examiner that is of In
terest In Salem was that of Miss
Holen Huntington Holladay of
San Francisco, to Henry Norton
Ord who is well known here. Mr.
Ord is a business associate of T.
A. Ltveley. He is remembered
here also as a prominent horse
man. The completo account of the
betrothal follows:
"One of the most interesting
engagements of the season is that
of Miss Helen Huntington Holla-
day and Henry Norton Ord, which
was announced a few days ago by
the bride-elect's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. Burke Holladay of San
Francisco and San Marino.
"Mr. and Mrs. Holladay, with
their daughter and son, have
been spending a few days in town
at their old home on Holladay
Hill. They left last week for their
San Marino home.
"Miss Holladay is the grand
daughter of the late Judge and
Mrs. Samuel W. Holladay, the for
mer of whom was the owuer of
famous Holladay Hill property in
this city and made his home there.
Judge Holiaday was the alcalde
of Auburn In the early days of
California, and it was he who
named tho town. Collls Holladay
is the brother of the bride-elect,
and she Is the niece of Mrs. Allen
E, Meeser and Mrs. Reginald
Brooke of London and of Henry
Huntington of San Marino. The
late Collis P. Huntington was her
granduncle.
Try the New
& Cuticura
n Shnvlnrf SHnk
yjEMediciiial and Emollient
'Mr. Ord is the son of Mrs. Ed
ward O, C. Ord of Berkeley and
the late Major Ord, U. S. A. He
Is the grandson of the late Gen
eral Edward Otho Cress up Ord.
who came to California in 1847
and after whom the Presidio of
Monterey wae originally named
Ord BarraCKtj. During the late
world war, Mr. Ord served on the
staff of General Hunter Liggett,
but has since returned to pnvutc
life. He is a brother of Miss Ellen
and Miss Mary Ord, Edward O. C.
Ord Jr, and of Major James Ga-
resche Ord, U. S. A., who was sta
tioned at Fort Mason a few years
ago, Mr. Ord Is tho second cous
in of his future bride.
''The marriage of Mies Holla
day and Mr.. Ord will take place
in January at the Holladay home
In San' Marino, and they will
make their future home near Van
couver, where Mr. Ord's business
Interests are centered."
K
IDDIES'COLDS
should not be "dosed." Treat
them externally with
V VapoRub
TODAY AND TOMORROW
V 'If I
iouu oe
Thrilled by
Ailcen tf"SJ t Conway
Pringle ft $ V JT J Tcarle
HAROLD WINDUS Atthe Organ
Comedy
News
No Raise in
Prices
TOMOROW! ' Salem.8LeadiKDepartment Store EVERYONE"
cfhe Vkald iite...--BB
Willi ill I ' ' 1 SPECIALS TOMORROW! Sft
mllll r COATS Imported Scotch wool scarfs. New RftPnMKP
liwll Jwy Vicune novelty plaids- roeu- 9 QK Wm ,ii Rpf JotIII
111 (UA . In Rich Effects larly $3.75. Sale price 6.JD m,JMm0M
fill -isUW For HW Brushed Wool Scarfs with fringe ends. MMgljPPi
Mill I' 11 ' In rose, nile, orchid, grey, blue $9 7 r ' VWM'M
H ' MmS ww , u etc., Reg. $3.95. Sale price KZ.0 M MflmBXM Jm
I Sm&BL What will please her T' ... . ., ,. , .,, WK'SlmmmWm
P Wfe more than a fashionable Jersey Petticoats embroidered in bright
Si mMt in these luxurious colors, all the wanted shades QP W . IlMlll H
Si .qualities? Here one may in these. Special M mMMimmimM
11 mm shop for coats and not only Ram Coats in latest styles, blue, red, RwPfflKWffiK
1 ill get a bargain but have op- green olive drab ,(jq QK BffiffiQ
ll Ml portunity to choose from Special 0VO
P feJft fashion's best. Rich fabrics, Crepe de Chine and Crepe Back Satin 1 lifiWP1
ili U pt high grade furs, superb Combination Suits. Pink, orchid, nile, jSMj IMl i MJi
MMol Tfs, tailoring and all. peach and coral , fltr flr IXHffilM Jjf liS4s5
II IT special jbD.yo 11
hi I If $135.00 Values at....$89.50 ' w.vv iwmvw n u WfevjS
Ml 111 v f 89.50 Values at $59.50 SHuHl II fflv JPl
I OaVWoO and $3,00 HHlfeS
plliSl Women's Bath Robes $3.95 to $10.00 J 1 j II Ml JlHl, H I
Sill! Women's Negligees ,- $3.95 to $39.50 - Will 11 S
Vli Wmen'SPUllmanRObeS' $10.00 to $18.50 jjfl Hllp
MM I Tuesday's Gift Bargain
MM EXPRESS WAGONS ISM II
Mnf Thcae are reeu,arIy S1-45 ""d ?2-50 Wagons. Made of oak they I lli H I II MmWvli PP5
j-SlFfinr are sturly and useful- See tnem in our corner window tonight! I irfSlM 'SttoSP!
f'l SEE CORNER WINDOW
Bis aystv ar
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