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About The Eugene guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1924-1930 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1925)
Evening, March' 7, 1925 I cinrdnr I ' " . - r S rlnhl f HERE ARE THE NW MT1-FLAPPER HATS THE EUGENE GUARD "TL'n.oolis. reported on the work f ?o!S.i .ooil .vent. i.nnrd will be the masquerade Z which members of the Amen I"? V. .,,,1 the auxiliary will en- " the evening of .March 18. """iittre members arranging the CJ .re Mr. and Sirs. Wallace SrMr. nd Mrs. l Wallace. j and Mrs. Krans nenneu, .Mr. 5mc.m.i:;- ,1 . o( the notalrlu functions com u. Vi.. finish of the winter term's ..:..:.!. of the campus will ... t- which memhers . .v. rnrmai ifn " ,Teta Sigma rlii will entertain at , i hall "t hF Woman's build- A l. minr Friday, honoring the .n who will attend the annual """" V . .1.. il-Tnn Rtnte Edi- "",77s"naliin to be held on the ampin at thaMime. larjraet ltasinussen, lira. rl. h. Uordon, ami ;n. J; ,,,,..,.. crc invited guests fnr ' "meeting "f Mon'"- 1,n" "h Z week at the homo o Mrs. f V 'oekerline. at which time Mrs. Airline and Mrs W. C.lk.n. nlfrHined the club. Mrs. .1. . Holt led discussion during the study ; taking as the topic this tune 1. works of .Mabel Holmes Parsons. In two weens : be hostess iu Wednesdny Kinner club members .els of C. V. Uorer at the Osbora hotel this week. Mrs. Anne Uudsbury wra v'"" " (or the evcuing. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Abies. Mr. d Mrs. l-.vnn .nn-re.u, ..... d Mrs. Wilson It. Coffey make up ipartr who plsn to spend the week mi up the McKemie river. Mr. and .Mrs. Elmer I'aine of Port- Und are v.sitilil mis wee ... ..w. yesterday afternoon Mrs. George 1 . Hitchcock entertained informnlly at ei it her hopie ior ... . iliof a few frends of the latter. Mrs. Maud Johnson, and Mrs. I,a- Tnnre are among r.ugenenns .pending the week-end in Portland. Mr. Wilson n. Coffey returned the lint of the week after a short stny in Pnrltaml. For an all-day sewing bee, busi ness session mm aunt., " bers of the I'nitarian Woman s nl- liince met at the eliurili Tuesdny. id., n mv of nearly two months it Coronado, California. Dr. and Mrs. William Kuykenda.il returned at mid Keek to their home in Eugene. They lent down with President nnd Mrs. I. I'mniihel of tie University ot Oreiton, nnd Mr. nnd Mrs. Campbell Church. Friends of President Camp dell will be glad to know that he is irmtly improved in health, though he and Mrs. Campbell and Mr. and Mrs. Church will be in California (or some time to come. -- Mr. nnd Mrs. C. A. Huntington bare been receiving messages of con rratulation from their many friends upon the birth of a daughter, Dur ham Ann, Sunday, March 1. (Jleefully appreciative of a cause nhich enlightens the worries of ap proaching examinations, university Mmlcnts arc anticipating a gala time this evening when they gather at the Woman's building for one of the liraer social functions of the year the Frosh glee. The dance Is always formal. Heretofore it hoa been Jiren In the armory but it waa de rided this year to hold it in the Woman's building. Patrons and pat ronesses for the evening will be Mr. and Mrs. Dean Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Jhn Strauh, Mr. and Mrs. Henry 1'. Sheldon. Mr. and Mrs. II. M. Iouglass, Mr. and Mrs. Teter C. Oocxatt, Mr. and Mrs. Carlton Spen wr. Mr. and Mrs. I,. II. Johnson. Mr. and Mrs. Karl Onthnnk. Mr. and Mrs. Frederic S. Iunn, Mrs. Vir finia Judy Esterly. An interesting meeting of Thursday s that of the Eugene high school I'arent-Teat-her association in the hiih srhonl building. A program was ia. (In the first Thursday of April the group vin mfot again, this time in "I'eveninr. A special feature for the Wtinr will hn a nhr.rt nlsr hr the 'ramaiin department of the high fnool. Outstanding of the various campus nti of the week-end have been 'he Ceremonies nf tnntallnlinn nt Phi 'mi Pi AS Alnhn Mian,, nk.nl.r nf Jhela Chi, national men's fraternity. wiallalmn ceremonies were held '"day aflernoon and this afternoon the ehamber of commerce rooms. J smoker was lielil at the College , a banquet will Jum, and a large reception, honor- 'isiling officials of the frater Jty and visiting delegations from " chnp,ers, will be given in the raftsmen clubhouse tomorrow afler-"- .Members of the installation "rn,iie. h(,r, , prM, ,t lh ""monies are It. A. Mcllhaney. W Vn.1 . tnj-j ,ionn Mi Simpson. '"rtlanJ. i i, , , CI . , . ..on, j -n.ip. ,.:,': '. llannaford. Ilerkeley. ''oiinr,! Coombs. Portland: I. r. All, Corvsllis, t',n..l 1. Mil. 'orralli.: l r i,i,. I'.ln 0. fml . . ... ' ' b-j. i , 1 "sries n. wtnn, 1'ort- he , 1 ' "".fton, Iiallas; V. 1 nrrett ''orrill. Inrtlanrt: . C. Jensen i Wayne (iurley, Canby; W. "orge, Porltand. There are number of the members of at Oregon Agricultural i . miTevsiiy of cashing "If., nd about raiernit ' of the siate. '"""i of ,. , "' "' 1HH na . "."'rnny. irom twenty-five rar- Mr i A r Ul.:.. I- ' "i.ifn rnieriflinr.1 t Nil,....' . ... ot, V""""ni l.a.lies Aid so t an Tue..u- ... . tn,. ... ' '"is wees, at ner aerj l " i me rntircn narve ""oo, wr,k hojin i-1" kc new church arrang es k.if - . "edicafion ceremonies Tbroe HEIiE ARE SOME OF THE NEWEST HATS WITH WHICH THE MILLINERY DICTATORS HOI-E TO CHANGE THE SAUCY FLAPPER INTO A DIGNIFIED GRANDE DAME. THESE MOD ELS WERE PRIZE WINNERS AT THE RECENT FASHION SHOW OF TUB RETAIL MILLINER? ASSOCIATION ' IN NKW YORK. AT THE UPPER LEFT IS JEAN LAMONT, WITH THE PRIZE WINNING HAT IN THE FEATH ER CLASS. AT TH,E UPPER RIGHT IS THE PRIZE WINNING FLOWER HAT WORN BY KATH ARINE BASS1NGER, BELOW 13 THE RIBBON PRIZE WINNER, HIDING PART OF DORIS FREE MAN'S FACE tween five-thirty o'clock and seven thirty o'clock. The event is known as the annual membership banquet, and nt that time the results of the election of officers for the campus association are announced. Miss Florence Buek ot Eugene is the re tiring president of the association, j and is arranging the program for Tuesday's banquet. It is planned that, one hundred and fifty more will be in attendance. On Tuesday evening the Lane County O. A. C. club will sponsor a dinner party nt the chamber of commerce rooms as an observance in recognition of the seventeen years of service rendered to the state of Oregon and Oregon Agricultural col lege by Dr. William Jasper Kerr, president of the college. The dinner is to be informal and is planned for six-thirty oVdock. Guests of honor and speakers for the occasion will be Colin V. ltyment, dean of the col lege of 'liberal arts and sciences at the University of Oregon; Captain E. 0. Allworth, of Portland; and E. . T. Reed,, college editor at Oregon Agricultural college.' Covers will be placed for about two hundred and fifty persons. A musical program is to be given by the O. A. C. orchestrn, and dancing wiil follow the dinnct. i -' At the home of Mrs. II. ,T. Leonard on Wednesday nftcruoon the mem bers of the Matrons' Guild nuxiliury of the Central Presbyterian church met, with Mrs. Leonard, Mrs. Fred Sicilians, Mrs. A. C. Miesol, Mrs. C. S. Benjamin and Mrs. Frank Noin balais as hostesses. Mrs. Horace Burnette led in the program for the afternoon. The new officers of the organization were installed and are Mlrs. H. M. Anderson, president; Mrs. C. O. Wilson, vice-president; Mrs. Ilnrry Hobbs. secretary; Mrs. J. O. Holt, treasurer; Mrs. M. 0. Harris, assistant treasurer. Rev. A. H. Saunders of the Presbyterian church was the installing officer. A social hour followed the installation ceremonies. The meeting was at tended by a large number of the members. In two weeks Mrs. C. L. Tcshncr will entertain the auxiliary. Mrs. Francis Buell Olson, national president of the Degree of Honor lodge, will be a visitor in Eugene on April 13. and at that time mem bers of the F.ugene lodge will be hostesses at a reception nnd ban quet in Mrs. Olson'a honor in the Osburn hotel. WORK DOESN'T SPOIL NICE HANDS Preservation of Their Beauty la Held to Be Only a ' Matter of Good Care Tin' 4 ' ' " i , .7T By MME. GEORGETTE Above are the beautiful hands of Dorothy Gray, below it Miss Mary Meeker of Brooklyn, show ing her hands which have been declared to be among the most beautiful In America.. She keeps them beautiful although she washes dishes nearly every day. (liia massage very gentle. Enlarged rjpHE enre of your hntjcls begins with joints frequently bespeak tbe piatiint Home Hints - I 4 nrXICIOCS flavor i obtained by " rubbing loaf sugnr over the rind of a lemon that has been washed and wiped dry and using this sugar to sweeten tea. If the sugnr stands in a glass jar after it lias been so treat ed so much the better. Luncheon Dish Scrambled eggs to which canned asparagus and canned pensiiave been added is a delicious luncheon dish. Small Biscuits Biscuits should always he small, so that they may tempt by their dainti ness as well as by their quality. For Shortcake Canned fruit is almost as delicious as fresh for shortcake if you i it with plain or whipped cream. Navy Blue Agaia Navy blue is a staple in the aver ... .m.n s wardrobe, but it is be k, ""t in furnishing the parish ; particularly featured for spring is being columned wnn nr.ani- rolnred buttons and color contrasts that lift it out of the mediocre class. A. ....... ' .a i"h " f HiterMt ro fhl K. vT'",-n ill b tho banquM w"'"' Wnm.n - Chri.n a- I ,.?. ,h' r the affair will," ip fh tollrg H,dP lno be- New Collars Collar of onttrf rrp with Irmf a-rarf enHi finish nm f th the washing, but it doesn't end there. Itenutiful hands are not, like soul ful eyes or a perfect nose, gracious gifts from kindly disposi! gods. Thy are nevir accidental. They are the one attribute of loveliness that yon nrvcr have unless you make the ef fort. The story Is" told of a famous hos tess who had a somewhat uncompro mising face, but had beautifully shaped hands. She glorified hr hands and marit them so grnceful and expressive by enre and study that she gained the. rnutntion nf being a great beauty Just because of them. They so fascinated the be holders that the attention was rivet ed nnd there the features were scarcely noticed. Housework and Hands That may be overdrawn I suspect it is. Hut we all know of women whose henuty has depended more on their Bands than on their face. And does nut the mere mention nf the name of Elennnra Inse conjure up a vision of bauds that were the em bodiment of grace and poetry? You can do all your housework and still have lovely hands if you protect them by rubber or loose can- van gloves when you are scrubbing, j sweeping, dusting or engaging in any thing that soils the hands. You should always protect your hands from dirt whenever possihle nince, it is not advisable to wash them more than is absolutely neces sary. Too frequent washing dries , the skin and injures the texture, j Nevr put your bands into hot , water containing strong soaps or . washing powders without slipping on. your rubber gloves. j If your hands are badly chapped, smear them nightly with vaseline or j mid cream and wear loose gloves all j night. In a short time the texture, of the t.kin will be soft and satiny.; Never use strong toilet soaps on your hands. Have a good mild soap ; and a nnil bruh wllh medium bristles that will remove all grime and soil from the cracks and crevices. After each washing dry the bands thoroughly. One of the chief causes of rough, coarse looking hands is i hasty drying which leaves them par- , irularlr susceptible to changes in temperature. l.emon juice is effective in remov ing any stains awl should be rubbed into the skin after cleansing. A lo tion of gljeertne and Tosewatsr after thi wlil keep the hands soft and , white. A Matuage Is Goo Once of twice a week you should i give your lianas a massage wnn . ; warm olive or cocoenut oil. l.egm . j at the finger tip and masRage each ' j finger downward as if yoti were ; 1 working on a clone-fitting glove .Then extend this treatment over the ;ril with the same hort caressing i strokes. Continue the treatment to the elbow and eren up to the should der. Kleevelew gO n til list be served. If you have any tendency toward I enlarged reins, be careful to make , or the Monographer wucu they are not of rheumatic origin. To improve this condition' maiiipulutc the flenh about the joints so as to build it up. If your hands are always cold, this Is ait indication of poor circulation and your physician ahould be consult ed. Very moist bands tudicntc low vitality and a faulty tliet for which again medical advice is the logical course. In my next article I shall take up the manicure. Lenten Recipes Tty SISTKH MA ICY VIIKTIIKK people observe lent or not, for the sake of their health they should use less meat as the spring days come. In my series of lenten recipes. I shall give numerous dishes that will be appetising and .satisfactory for meat. The cost of many of these dishes will be considerably less than a meat course, also. Baked Herriag Allow one medium-sited fish for two persons. Have fish cleaned and honed. Wash carefully iu very cold water and dry between towels. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and few drops of lemon juice. Koll in fine corn meal. Tut into a well: greased shallow pan or on a baking j sheet, skin side down, llrown skin ; side and then turn and brown flesh side. Hake lit) or -o minutes in a hot oven. Serve garnished with slices of lemon. Haking the fish in the oven pre vents the inlor of the cooking fish from penetrating through the house. Broiled Halibut Steak Have finh cut in inch slices, one ami one-half pounds halibut steak will serve four persons. Wash steaks ami wipe as dry as possible. Sprinkle with snlt and pepper and place in n well greased hroilor. Turn often while broiling. When fish is tender ami a delicate brown remove from hroilcr to hot platter, spread wiht softened butter and sprinkle with finely minced parsley and a dash of paprika. To remove fish from broiler loosen on one side, turn and loosen from other side. A double-hinged broiler is imperative for the broiling most kinds of fish. Whole fish are turned but once during broiling, tha skin side being browned first and then the flesh side. Baked and Stuffod Fish Any fish weighing from two to four and five pounds can be stuffed and baked. Hluc fish, small cod, had dock, lake trout, whitefish and mack erel arc delicious baked and make a substantial "niece re resistance" foty dinner. Oyster stuffing is particularly "taste-y" with cod and halibut and a brend or cracker stuffing is always good with any fish. Mushrooms Rdd much to the dish if a company din ner is wanted. Mushroom Stuffing Two cups bread crumbs. 4 table spoons melted butter, 0 tahlespoons chopped mushrooms. 1 .tablespoon capers, 1 teaspoon tabasco sauce. Squeeze bread crumbs out of hot water. Add melted butter, mush rooms, capers and tabasco sauce and mix well. Hemove scales, fins, head ami tail from a fresh codfish weighing about four pounds. Open, clean and wipe with a .piece of cheesecloth wrung out of cold water. Sprinkle inside with pepper. IMace on fish sheet in dripping pan and bake 4," minutes in a hot oven. Baste with 2 table spoons butter melted in one-half cup boiling water. When cod. halibut. haddock or mackerel are stuffed with a plain stuffing, gashes should be cut. on each side of the backl-oneand nar row strips of fat salt pork inserted. The fish then is not basted with the butter and water, but with the fat in the pan. Plain Stuffing One cup bread crumbs. 1 cup cracker crumbs, 0 tablspoons melted butter, K tenspoon nlt, teaspoon pepper. V teaspoon onion juice, 4 tablespoons hot water, 2 tenspoons minced parsley. Mix ingredients in order given. Omit onion juice and add 1 table spoon lemon juice ami 1 cup oysters to above rule to make oyster stuf fing. All crneker crumbs can be used, (f preferred. . Fish Chowdor Three pounds cod or haddock, 4 good-sized potatoes, 1 onion. .'1 slices fat snlt pork, .1 cups scalded milk, i 1 tablespoon butter, snlt and popper, (I common soda crackers. Have f trili skinned nnd cleaned, but ' head and (nil left on. Hemove head, tail and backbone. Put into a stew j pan, cover with cold water and bring j slowly to the hoiling point. Simmer 20 minutes. Cut fish into two-inch pieces. Cut pork into small pieces and try out fat. Add onion cut into ( thin slices and cook five minutes. Strain fat into kettle. Pare, potatoes j and cut into half -inch cubes. I'nr- j boil for five minutes. Drain and add to fat in kettle. Add 2 cups boiling , water, broth strained from fish bones' and fish. Cook until potatoes and fish are tender. Add milk. salt, pep per nnd butter nnd bring to the boil ing point. Split crackers and soak In enough cold milk to moisten. Add to chowder and serve. A fish chowder served with a sub stantial salad and dessert makes a nourishing and satisfying dinner for the first warm days of spring. j For luncheon nothing is more de ! licious than a fish salad of some sort. 1 ; Lobster, crab meat and shrimp com bine with celtjry perfectly for a "spe j cial" salad, while tuna fish and sal i mon and some of the smoked fish ' furnish delicious. Inexpensive salads. ' NEITHER BORROW NOR LEND OF ARTICLES FOR TOILET TABLE Friend Who Wanti to Borrow Comb. Powder or Llpatlck It Plain Pest and Should be Given Refusal tint. That is abjut all the equipment yon need for a good complexion. The other requirements are the in telligence to make the most of what you have and the character to stick at your job until you have accom plished what you want. Needles to say. the getting of the eosinehc i9 the easie.it part of the job, (Copyright. W?5. XEA Service. Inc.) Never put a lipstick directly to your Hps By MMK. GKOKGETTB EITllKIl a borrower nor a lender be, I'olnnius counseled Hamlet, and this advice should be given to every serious beauty seeker. That is, don't borrow or lend toilet articles. The friend who la always wanting to use your comb, powder or lipstick, is a plain pest and should be refused with the truthful statement that you don't lend such' intimate articles. At home, of course, you will keep a perfectly clean brush and comb and nil toilet aids for guests, but you can not be expected to carry an extra supply about with you fnr t ho care leas person who leaves her own at home. Danoers Pointed Out Pandruff and other equnlly unde sirable scalp diseases are easily transmitted by the indiscriminate use of brushes nnd combs. AVnsh your own brush and comb at least twice a week, using ammonia and water nnd dry with the bristles up in the air. Never borrow a powder puff. Far better a shiny visage. The dirty pow der puff is probably the most subtle enemy to the perfect complexion. Hot ter than the puff or chamois, unless washed after each using, is the pad of medicated cotton that can be used once ami discarded. Don't share towels ana soap with another. If there is any place where extravagance in justified it is in the use of clean towels, How many women do you know who cleanse their faces with cold cream, then rub nfff the grease with n dirty towel they keep in the drawer of the dressing table fur Hint purpose Fashion Czars Seek to Shelve Flapper Grande Dame With Her Dignity to Be Reinstated and never change from one week to another? What, earthly good does It do to cleanse the face with an expensive and delicate cream if you arn only , going to rub in more dirt than you rub out? You have undone every thing yon did. It in far more eco nomical to use soft white tissue paper made into pads for the purpose of removing makeup or a pieco of clean cotton that you discard afterward than soiled towels.' Don't borrow or lend lipsticks. Never use your own lipstick directly on your Hps. Instead rub the tip of your fourth or little finger over your stick after having washed your hands spread the color ' with the finger. You can do a much neater job than is possihle by using the stick directly. Keep all your toilet suppftea clean. Don't let your powder stand around in nn uncovered box to collect dust. Don't let your cold cream jar stnnd open. It will not only gather Impurities but will deteriorate rapidly in quality and soon become a rancid mesa. Dont experiment with lotions that promise to blench, remove freckles or wart a instantly or do anything magical. Don't get the idea that you need a large supply of cosmetics. What You Need Told What you really need ia a good cleansing cream, which should be of highest quality, but it need not cost several dollars n jar. As a base for powder have nn oily crenm if your skin is dry and a vanishing cream if your skin Is oily. Have a gdnd as tringent for closing the pores, a pure sonp for cleansing, a good powder, nnd if you moke up more extensively have rouge and lipstick that match in Hy HORTEXSE SAUNDERS (XE.V Service Writer) NKW YORK, March 7. The flap per must look to her laurels. It isn't the reformers that are after her now, but the fashion dic tators. They want to reinstate the grande dame, with her dignified wava, clnborate clothes and expensive tastes. What is going to happen to the world s second Inrrest industry if the garconne vype nf dress that does not need more than a atrlng tie for trimming, and the felt hat that doesn't even need that, prevails? Pretty soon we won't be spending anything at all for clothes! The first big drive against the flapper was made hy the Retail Mil linery asancintion at their spring fashion show. The show marked the inaugural of a movement lb millinery with so ciety women, artists and designers eo-operatin? to launch fashionable iu oe worn by the American women, ahowu on models who repre sent the. en r rant ;,nn. i . beauty. No Flappers The committer tiw n... tllQ mannequins numbered auch per- n vnanes iana (iibaon, Neysa MeMein, I ley worth Campbell. Frank Alva Parsons, and the list of patronesses was headed by the Duchess de Richelieu. The nrltmrs riiri thai Ak .1 t ly and well. They selected an ag- arcBunon or fiaxzllng beauties to show the rest of us how well we don't wear our clothes. Hut there wasn't a flapper Id the Int. She wasn't given a look-in. SimpHcty was conspicuous by , Its absence. Lace, ribbons .flowers and feathers ran riot. Formality and pie turesqueness won out completely. Finery Wins Vlotory Lace staged a marvelous comeback. It dripped from large and small hats alike. Flowers ooxed out from brims that have been severely plain. And there were streamers and " bow.i enough to have satisfied even Rey nolds or Wattenu. Ostrich feat hern flaunted them selves as riotously as if they had not heen passe for years. Colors were the vague, pastel shadea that have been regnled to the boludolr these several seasons past. There were Inrge floppy hats that distract men and small snappy ones that lead them on, but throughout feminity and the lavish use of gorgeous color and ma terial was stressed. ffl mmmi Mi' Plt -i 5 -if ih. ilrfi.r .nr- mwmmmmiiiim It was In 1844 that Chauncey D. Peace, I, manu factured his first piano. With that piano he estab lished a standard from which those who came after him have never deviated. Direct descend anta of -the founder have since carried on the business of the Pease Piano Co.. and though the, difference between the 1844 olano and the 192S product ia markedthough changes and im ' provements have been many yet the underlying principle of putting the best that le In one Into the making of one's product still obtains In the hugs factory that today manufacturers the Pease Plsno. !' a. 1 121 7,n Ave' Nr. M ' Marshall's MEHLIN PEASE BRADBURY AND WEBSTER PIANOS EDISON PHONOGRAPHS AND RECORDS i LET THE SIMPLE TRUTH Told By The Washer Itself GUIDE Your Purchase Easy Terms 1 - Wuhu futcr. 2- W.shudctncr. 3- I.int'st hourly capacity in the world. 4- Most compact washer maile takes floor space only 25 inches iquare. 0 Cast aluminum t u b c n ' t warp, rot, awell. split or corrode. OutstnndlniJ Mayua Feature 6 Easily sdjuated to your height. 7 Clothes can be put ia or taken out with the washer running. g -Tub clcsns it self. 9-All metsl wringer. Self sdjuating. 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If tho Maytag doesn't sell itself com pletely convince you that you'll bo handicapped without, it re turn it. Head the "!l Outstand ing Maytag Features" again. Guraf r. TTlawag bam HVasher WITH CAST ALUMINUM TUB.; Ij3 r ' mm THE MAYTAG SHOP Headquarters with BERRY PIANO & FURNITURE CO. 740 Willamette Street Phone 1470 '.''I., I eW'.-i I -It HR'''-i.S:rM mm ( ; f i : ': ; a! lid m .' ' '''' i ' m 5 w-