Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974, September 20, 1940, Page 3, Image 3

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    FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1940
VERNONIA EAGLE, VERNONIA, OREGON
LEfSBE SOCIABLE
Study Club Has
First Fall Meet— •'
daughter of Mr. and Mi*. Alois
Imfeld, to Mr. John Via May, son
Th; first fall meeting of the of Mis. Ida Snyder Of Portland
Vernonia Study Club w s held and Mr. Daniel May of Glenwood,
Thur day aKernojn, September 12, Oregon. The Rev. Bonaventura
ti the home of Mrs. E. J. Preston, Huesies, O. S. C., o ficiated in the
mo is the president o the organ­ p esence of about 200 relatives and
ization.
friends.
Al 1er the dessert luncheon the
The bride, given in marriage by
business meeting was held. The her father, wore a dress of white
reading and acceptance o- the satin, trimmed at neckline with
its.gnaiion of Mrs. Hamp Roberson pearls, with long train and full
wa3 heard. To fill the office of kng h veil falling from a head dress
secretary, which Mrs. Rcberson was o
orange blossoms. She carried
to hold this year, Mrs. E. M. Boll­ an oval-s'haped bouquet of pink
inger was elected.
rose buds, white stock and bouv-
Following the business meeting, ardia with large white organdy
Mrs. Marvin Kamholz reviewed bow.
“Failure of a Mission” by Sir
Mi s Helen Imfeld, a twin sister,
Nevil.e Henderson, British Am­ was he bride’s only attendant. She
bassador to Berlin from 1937 woie a biue silk organdy dress, bine
until the outbreak of the war. velvet ribbon in her hair and carri­
Henderson provides, as only one ed a bouquet of pink asters and
can who was in close contact bouvardia with a large white bow.
with all tha movements of Ger­
Lvnn Selfridge of Hillsboro acted
many during these hectic days •as best man. Lloyd Coffman of
o* anaiety and preparation for Glenwood and Walter Chambers of
war; ths background of Ger­ Vernonia were ushers. Mrs. Olson
man îrot.iical, geographic and soc­ was solist and Mrs. Theresa Fen-
ial status; the untiring e Horta of clio played the wedding music.
England, France and Italy, partic- There were out of town guests
uaily the former, in attempting to i.rom The Dal'es, Vernonia, Banks,
negotiate peacefully; Hitler’s mega­ Glenwood, Manning, Hillsboro and
lomania; and the futility of nil from California. A reception was
peaceful cflorts; thus gaining the held in the Swiss hall from 8 until
tit.e o the historical book, “Fail­ 1 o’clock. There was music by a
ure of a Mission.”
four piece orchestra. Many lovely
rnd useful gifts were received.
About 300 attended the reception.
Helen Messing Takes
The couple left for a honeymoon
Wedding Vows—
The marriage of Helen Messing trip to Cannon Beach.
On theii return, September 1(3,
and George Harris of Portland was
lead at eight-thirty Saturday eve- Mr. and Mrs. May will be at their
ring, September 14, at the home new home built by the bride’s
of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Gould at father, at 5226 S. E. Harold St.
1,15 N. E. 50th street in Portland.
The impressive double ring cere­ Rainbow Girls to
al ,ny was heard before an improvis­ Infall Officers—
ed altar of white asters and
Members of the Rainbow Girls
gladioli.
will carry out a public installation
Given in marriage by her father, at the Masonic Temple next Mon­
E. F. Messing, the bride wor; a day evening. He'di Reich, outgoing
tailored dress of brown wool, brown Worthy Advisor, will be installing
accessories : nd an orchid corsage. off er. Myrtle Stacey will be In-
Miss Peggy Harris of Portland at- staking Marshall and Joanne Nich-
nded th» bride. Lyle Gould was
Instaliing Chaplain.
best man.
Fo lowing th; ceremony, witness­ Pvthian Sisters Hold
ed by on y close friends and rela­
tives. a reception was held at the Meet Last Week—
The Pythian Sisters held their
Gould heme.
irst meeting of the fall on Wed­
nesday, September 11. Mrs. A. L.
Wedding Rites
Ki’l nde.r was elected as repre-
Taken by Couple—
G «nd T-mn'o
I •"» basket; of pink and white ricns. Mrs. Harry Kerns was named
g'ad'Ji and pa ms decorated St. as alternate.
Jif.'-nb’s Catholic church the after­
Mrs. M. J. Lamping and Mr3.
noon o August 31st for th; mar- Oliver Mellinger served refresh-
liage of Miss Anna Ruth Imfeld, m nts to th; group.
Culbertsons Have
Anniversary Dinner—
Legion Com Feed
Well Attended—
Mr. and Mr*. Harry Culbertson
celebrated their 19th wedding an­
niversary with a dinner Tuesday,
September 17. Guest* were Mr.
and Mrs. L. L. Crawford, Mr. and
Mrs. E. P. Crawford and Mr. and
Mrs. O. Howell, all of Manning.
The annual corn feed staged last
Friday evening by the American
Legion was well attended by Legion
men and business men and much
enjoyed by those present for the
evening.
An average of eight or nine full-
sized ears of corn were consumed
by every person present giving in­
dication that none was hungry after
the feed was over.
Business Women to
Meet Tuesday—
The Vernonia Business Women
will have their first fall meeting
next Tuesday night, September 24,
at the Franklin Malmsten home.
Tawankas Elect
New Officers—
At a recent meeting of the
Tawanka Camp Fire Girls the fol­
lowing officers were elected to
serve for the next three months:
president, Joyce Hatchard; vice-
president, Mabie Hall; secretary,
La Vonia Hobin; treasurer, LaVelle
Tipton; monitor, Ruth Hall; scribe.
Hazel Jones; song leader, La Rue
Moon. Miss Grace Condit is guard­
ian of the Tawanka group.
Annual Banquet
Very Successful—■
The annual Mother and Daugh­
ter banquet held last Friday night
in the social hall of the Evangelical
Church was a very successful and
inspirational affair. The hall was
rilled to capacity. The combinel
circles of the Missionary society
sponsored the event.
Principal speaker of the evening
was Dorothy Eakin of the Portland
Y. W. C. A. A toast to daughters
was given by Mrs. J. W. Nichols;
Geraldine Riggins responded for
the daughters in giving a toast
to mothers. Incidental music before
the banquet was provided by
Martha Tapp and Eileen Enos. Vocal
solos by Mrs. L. H. Dewey and Mrs.
M. H. Kamholz were heard at the
close of the banquet.
PAGE THREE
girls— all of them eager to kiss
the lad who, they have been told,
is a playboy millionaire.
The friend, going on the theory
that, if more of the hair of the
dog that bit you is a cure for a
hangover, girls and more girls
should be a cure for girl-shyness.
“SEVENTEEN" DEPICTS
WOES OF FIRST LOVE—
Seventeen, the glorious, golden
age of freshly-painted jalopies, two-
toned shoes, blind dates, lemon
cokes and most important of all
—first love, immortalized in the
Marthas Have Party
novel, “Seventeen,” by the incom­
for Daughters—
The Martha Circle of the Evan­ parable Booth Tarkington, is given
gelical Missionary Society held a a hilarious going-over on the screen
handkerchief shower at the H. R. in the new comedy of the same
Scheuerman home the night of name!
Scheduled to have it« local open­
Tuesday, September 10, honoring
Erma Kent, Joanne Nichols and ing next Friday at the Joy Theatre,
Zonweiss Douglass who leave for Paramount’s film version of the
their respective schools next week. .Tarkington classic stars two of the
Each of the girl, was “shower­ screen’s currently best-liked young­
ed” with gift handkerchiefs when sters, Jackie Cooper and Betty
she opened an umbrella. Games Field. Their smash success as the
and refreshments were included in high school sweetheart* of the re­
cent “What a Life” is recommenda­
the evenings attractions.
Mrs. Harvey Scheuerman and tion enough for their new vehicle
Mrs. Charles Dversaul had charge together.
“Seventeen,” which won its uni­
of the party.
versal popularity because of its
hilarious picture of the triais of
■puppy love, its sharp understand­
ing of typical American youth and
its exciting presentation of the
drama of growing up, tell* a story
bound to charm every one who ha*
PENNER CAUSES LAUGHS
ever been seventeen.
News of the
Theatre
IN LATEST FILM—
Hand-tailored for the inimitable
talents of Joe Penner, popular f ilm
and radio comedian, "Millionaire
Playboy,” which will soon have its
initial showing here, promises to
hit a new hilarity high in Penner
comedies.
Penner is cast in the role of a
young man who has never exper­
ienced the thrill of love because
ever since his cradle, girls’ kisses
have made him hiccup violently.
Joe wants desperately to be cured,
and his friend takes him to a
resort hotel that is full of oomph
takes place on Sunday at the Joy
Theatre.
Cast as a sort of Robin Hood of
the seven seas. Flynn’s newest
cinematic adventure is said to over­
shadow even such outstanding suc­
cesses as “Charge of The Light
Brigade,” “Captain Blood,” “Ad­
ventures of Robin Hood,” and “Vir­
ginia City,” as he carves himself a
path to glory with his sword and
cutlass. There’s romance, too, with
lovely Brenda Marshall, as the
Spanish beauty who wins the heart
of the bold buccaneer.
Other members of the featured
cast include Claude Rains, Flora
Robson, Donald Crisp and Alan
Hale, heading a supporting cast
of thousands.
DENNIS MORGAN STARS IN
JOY ADVENTURE FILM—
For scenes in “River’s End,”
Warner Bros.’ thriller, at the Joy,
Morgan, who stars in the film, was
supposed to escape from his jailers
—two stalwart North West Mount­
ed Police—after hearing the death
sentence pronounced over him.
After fighting his way through
the courtroom mob he jiunrpe.l
from the window and made good
his escape. Director Ray Enright
had him do it three times; then,
to film the jump from outside, had
him do it three more.
The “police” rushed to the win­
dow and shot after him.
"River’s End” was adapted for
the screen from the popular James
Oliver Curwood novel, by Barry
NEW ERROL FLYNN FILM
Trivers and Bertram Millhauser.
AT JOY ON SUNDAY—
Local debut of “The Sea Hawk,” Ray Enright directed.
Errol Flynn’s newest starring pic­
ture which is already receiving
There are 40,000 direct jobs in
rave notices from critics who have paint, varnish, and lacquer factories
previewed it at the West Coast. in the United States.
LUMBER — SHINGLES — VENEER
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
See my bargains in Kiln Dried Lumber at $7.50 per M. and up.
Open Saturdays from 8 a. m. to noon.
C. BRUCE
vnttp WEEK’S PROGRAM AT THE
JOY THEATRE
Thur-da", Scpt.mbsr 19; BARGAIN NIGHT
^rl’.tlt« 2'c; Children 10c
PHANTOM RAIDERS—John Carrol, Walter
Pidgeon
BILL OF DIVORCEMENT—Maureen O’Hara,
Fay Ba inter, Adolphe Menjou
Fri., Sat., Sent. 29, 21
Tuesday, September 24
?AL NIGHT
SSE JAMES
Tyrone Power, Henry
Fond' Rand''lr»h Scott,
Nancy Kelly
In Technicolor
Also—YOUNG AMER-
TAN FLYERS—Jean
Parker, Donald Woods
Girls . . giggle*
.. and gags !
JoePSk’Nffc
SKO RADIO ridar»
Also—SEVENTEEN
Jackie Cocper
Sun., Mon., Sept. 22, 23
i
i
Wednesday Thursday
September 25, 26
LONE WOLF MEETS
A LADY
Warren William, Jean
Muir
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