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About The news-review. (Roseburg, Or.) 1948-1994 | View Entire Issue (May 20, 1960)
10 Th Nswi-Revlew, Roseburg, 4 .&jUAMVsi THE DOUG-ETTES Sheriff's Mounted Patrol in vite the general public to their third onnuol Ploy day May 22 at the Douglos County Fairgrounds. Registration is at 9 a m. and the junior show begins at 10 a.m. with the Senior show at 1 p.m. Refresh ments will be available. Doug-ettes in the picture above include Hazel Jameson, captain; Lee Albert!, first lieutenant; Harriet McAlister, second lieutenant, secretary; Gertrude Sherlock, second lieutenant, treasurer; Juanita Wilson, drill ser geant; Loretta Garrett, chairman, executive com- .iwwi. imuin i-hi. ii. m nii'm mmtm v-y,'Tr?nrt P"";1 . 1 fcl'iw iiimrJin liiMn ill! ilTlHlllil iM-niimWTrti' ftWJiMftoT! i fti. -nn . THE BUCKEROO SQUARE DANCERS celebrated the burning of the building mortgage at a Hawaiian luou (Hawaiian feast) at the Buckeroo Barn Saturday, night. Hawaiian cos tumes were in order for the occasion and following the luau, the members ond guests square danced. At left aie Norman Jonh, Ardis and Roland Edie, Agnes and Don Monroe, Paul and Alice Amann and Lewis and Dallas Pizer. At right are Inez John, Grace and Carl Rutfirauff, Neel and Ruth Simpson, George ond Bonny Riggs, Edna and Bill Wilson, Peggy and Lew Aumack, Ed Hounshell and Lillian Hort. Lower picture shows members at luou floor tables. (Picture by Bob Leber, Photo Lab). Hawaiian Theme Highlights Buckeroo Birthday Affair .More than 300 dancers cnimed: Ihe llurkeroo Birthday Square Dance parly held .Saturday night at the Bm-keruo Vain near Win cnesier. mr occasion scivrii to eel - coraie ine ourning oi ue irrigate. The Hawaiian theme was used in the decorations and lor Ihe ilmm ; Ing luau held at 7 p.m. Bill hjiday w as responsible for Ihe lovol nun , al which ornamented the walls. , I lowers and palm trees further. earned out the Hawaiian theme. , .Members came appropriately dressed and were given iociy now er leis lo wear. Ort. Fri., May 20, 1960 Play Day To Be I nteresting Event S V;- NNVrVTil A f J ft ft! I v w - v '" mittee: mittee Dinner was served it siv in.h hish tables, with guilts seated on pillows on the floor. Entertainment a furnished hv Rosebure Inns ' : mitcn l.cv. Hot Eddy and Frank Keeii, who perlormed in Kingston Trm n li Highlight of the evening was Ihe candlelight mortgage binning cere money, cunduclcd by Ihe caller, Curlcy ItevnoMs. Square 'dannft b" an at 9 p m , and al the 10 :i co.lre break, the Hm-kcroo ga a History of Ihe cum ny acting nut lour skits de 'puling growth of Ihe club. 0. ft" t: June Hansell, member, executive corn member, executive com- Louise Kring, mitte; Lillian Dorsey, Katherine Richmond, Betty Salikie, Allena Farenbaugh, Bette Murray and Barbara Fowler. Dorothy Collins is an active mem ber of the aroup. Senior judge will be Bert Corby of Eugene and junior judges include Lee Alberti and Bette Murray of Glide and Kotherine Rich mond, Roseburg. Timers will be John William Robertson, Eldon Howard and Bill Cox, Roseburg. Otto G. Garrett will be ring steward; Jaomi Partin Some pens write on butter! Bet ter still, now there's a pen tha 'writes with a three dimensional cf jlect on cloth. ! You ran ue it lo draw elitler. ing. embossed decorations tin. t- paf'l or hmie linens in gold. silver, or tnulu -colors The raised design are chii. tircor when drv. on wasncu Wlin soap or 114 " ' gem suns. . ( smiriT iraiirr. - nai is an r-; n an uoy oi m are worms apart an types of furniture are a w ise clamation point lo what you are Each country has its own culture! investment even if vou use Ihem This is not too flattering to Ihe-1 trying to say about yourself. 1 like j background, so the girls and boys only once or twice a vear while young ladies of Munich, llermany. hats well thai pick lha hat i of Puerto Rico mature earlier." i you are awav on vacation, or dm where a housework course is of-1 fust and then the outfit to go with I She is emaged lo a 2S year oH ing hvy spring cleaning. 0 le red lo siiKle men. II includes I it " i hook salesman who is "wonderful. these transparent covers w ipe iioMug, cleaning, wasmng. ann - ironing. so they in lorn, can tearh their bride how lo take proper care ol tlieni: :rrh hYrlrrH 1 fl. J t f -iff will be recorder; announcers will be Gertrude Sher lock for the junior program and A. J. Farenbaugh for the senior program. Ribbon girls include Carol Garrett, Linda Kring, bette Kring, Mary Lyn t-aren baugh, Gaye Farenbaugh ond Mary Lee Starnes The junior program the senior program drill and 1 1 races. Studio.) Paints Used iBy DOROTHY V. WHIPPLE, M.O.'to AP Nawsftaturti I.itlle children love to dabble in painls. If you fix them up wilh a suit able .place and a little equipment, bolh you and your child will enjoy the painting. But don t expect a toddler lo paint pictures. Alany grownups have the notion that whenever a child paints, he must be copying something he has seen. But this is far from the truth. Litlle children seldom paint THINGS. It is ollcn the act of painting not the finished product that interests tne child. Adults thinlc of painting as an art form, but preschool children do not know about art. They ap proach painting, as they do other forms of activity as something to do, and it is the doing that's important, not the finished paint ing. Children paint what they feel. not wnat tney see. instead ot using painls to make pictures that rep resent the world in which they live, little children are expressing wnat they feel and how they feel. The adult who comes alcm and asks a litlle child, "What are you painting?" only conuses the young ster, Three-year-old Andy nicked tiDi Ihe brush, dipped it into the red paint and made a straight line down one side of the paper: then he made a wavy line at the bot tom. All the time he was chanting lo himself: "Ferryboat, ferrvboat, ferryboat on the river." Andy dip ped in for some more red paint and added some curlycues and a few big blobs; then ha nut his brush down and turned to his moth er. "Finished." he said. Alaybe Andy's painting repre sented Ihe river and a boat, maybe it didn't. Andy surely didn't know and couldn't have said in words why he painted as he did, but ob viously the experience was a verv salisfaclory one for him. As utile children become more familiar with paints they become freer in their ability to express how Ihey feel. Thev can "sav" wilh painls what they do not know how Why Women Love Hats By DOROTHY ROE AP Wamwi't Editor One definition of a successful feminine executive is: a womau who wears her hat in Ihe office. A quick look around Ihe glossier advertising, publishing and fashion firms in any big city bears out this view. It's easy to spot the boss lady she's the one wearing the hat. Some prominent women in and out of New York recently aired Ihiir views n the subject of hats: AIRS. CAROl.INK K. SIMON, lawyer and Secretary of Stale tor New York: "Choosing the right hat to go with a costume gives me al most as much salistaciion as wui ning a ease in court." DOROTHY DRAI'ER, noted dec oralor: "1 like the well-groomed effect of a hat planned to go wilh an outfit. 1 wear n.y hal in the onice an nay, so as not to spoil . . , "'"T "na 1 oouoienaie, and washed simultaneously, each in iu ALEXANDRA DAMI.OVA. bat- my mother doesn t mind that she i own machinecutting the week' lenna and choreographer: "1 al-1 is not with us. There are other laundry time down lo a matter of ways choose a dramatic hat for a i chaperones at the party, how- minutes! lecture date. 1 even wear a hat ever." j while directing rehearsals." I Sandra explains that the chaper-! Washable white is the top fah- JOAN CRAWFORD, business ex-1 one set-up isn't a strain because ion for the spring of I960 ecutive and movie mar: "1 couldn't ' "young people have their own ta-! imagine dressing for the day and , ble. away from their parents' la-1 Bathing lakes on religion i"ni leaving off a hat. Hals are the I ble. I licence in Mexico everv June 2 lib, very snice and hie of a costume I I it bothersome to the hnv i th f.ai Ha i n,. k:...i. . That's why 1 wear my hat in the office taking il off would spoil the o 1 1 fit 1 created so carefully that morning. "The dress and hat are a unit, ami neither should Detract from Ihe other. I interpret thu rule by wearing a simple hat with an elan orate costume and gay flowered n, .1(, smlnle ouilits " MRS T MAKKO ROBERTSON' os'inr.n. iv iki movtc star: "I don t think anvthinc e so a woman wears h moro sublie ex-appeal than a hal." rru .i .1 VI. I , , : . 1 id . i)4 'J . ,5ir 'y(ra j -"if nes. I will ir.clude 10 races and 1 will include a grand entry, (Picture by Kash, Winston Expression say in words. The very expres sion of their feelings is satisfying lo Ihe youngsters. Ted was an aggressive little four year - old who bullied his way around. He loved to paint and splashed out his feelings in vivid colors and formless blobs. He was usually a Utile more tractable aft er a time at the easel. He had said with paints how he felt and the very saying made him more comfortable. Timid children, too. benefit from having a way to "say" how thev feel. Carol was a shy, mousey lit- He four-year-old. When she first began to paint she made liny lit tle dols and lines in one corner j u, p.hci " H s "me viii on . shP venturpH fiirlhnr anii fnrtlini- , - iecnniques uveiopea ov ji r s. across the paper with bolder Arbogast in caring for her own str okes. I child are now in use throughout the Almost all children benefit from I nation having a way to express how they j And Airs. Arbogast - now 71 and feel about themselves and the peo- . stiii at.tive in (.are ot wnal sne pie they live with calls "exceptional cluldren '-was ,u h3llCHn UPiP y y",r ch',(l1- also honored as California's Moth wilh a medium like painting by all el. r ti,e year Tn? , , "l haven't done anything, real- th J.n.ina '0 psvrtioanalvze Arbogast "I've , Z m Wl" get l"'?1 just done the task that was set be- T. V . - una it ni-Ai. iu iniuussioie 10 araw con- elusions about rhilH fmm liie oaintines. Even uiiihnni i,n,ir 'standing what Ihe painting "means" the child benefits bv hav- ing said it. Teens Prefer Latin Beaux By VIVIAN BROWN AP Nwsfaturt$ Writtr Latin American boys are the "most." aerpp throe Pimi-tn oirU w-hrt i,j . ""-a" girls who have had reason to com- na re them wn h nr a .,.... hoys. The girls, all winners of a "typical teen-age contest." are on a six-weeks good will tour of 26 American cities. AU have been here before. "Our boys are brought up lo be very courteous and polile to wom en. You feel more secure with them." explains beautiful Margar ita Cosimi, lit. sophomore at the University of Puerto Itico. "They learn at an earlv age to treat a 12-or-n-yrar-old girl as a woman. with dignity and respect " I apy. All of them have learned to says Sandra Rodnquez, 18, a class-1 live happier lives, male of Aiarganta s. - And today the shelves are full Leslie Ann Mercado. 17, who at- i of books on Ihe care for such chil lends the Acadamie San Jose, Villa 1'lrcn many of Ihem dealing wilh Caparra, thinks Ihey "even enjoy !"le Arbogast techniques, or those the idea of being chaperoned." ! developed as a result of her work. Chaperones! Hear ye, girls, and "l'r endeavors, say some, have Ihey like it. helped pull thinking about retard "Oh, yes," savs Margarita. "We ijd ch,'kl'cn " out of lne Middle enjoy being chaperoned. All ourAs.rs , , , , . , , dates are like family parties. It is ! 'm Par,nls ho fear their chil fun. Whv shouldn 1'parents eniovl""'n may b" 1,,ss ll,an normal, dales with us? They go to Ihe I Arh2ast has this advice: mountains, the beach, on picnics' 'r lnl 5lt as quickly as possible, and to dances." i5rrk d and accept the fart ; . .kii. ii I without dismav." once in a while mothers get bored wilh Ihe routine. Do von ' know why? Because Ihe average! Experts predict that hv 1HS0 (he date lasts until six o'clock in the I two-car. swimming-pool-of-its-own morning, a thought that would hor-l familv will also be a four-washer rify most American parents. Says family. S"'!': , . I That makes sense because il will When your parents get to know; permit soiling cottons from K.ltr u-nll tlmx ... I... l . i . .... .. v,,, uivT.iiiiiY ivi vuu na e mm on a oouoie date, sometime "The boys know they miist b? - have in the proper way or Ihey cannot dile the daughters again. They don i eject a first-date kin a American boy do. They don't expect to park their car. Thev I Olher ceremonies in thin long could have idea, hut they would observed national fiesta include not he ife'rious about pressing them in the circumstances,'' savs Sand- ra. I 'A Latin girl of 18 and an Amer- ny, ana so nannsome inai sins fho when thev meet him " Mar - i tanla's beau i ?.t. The girls make debuts when they are 13. Three Hair Styles Offer Variety For Spring Season By CAILE DUGAS, NE Wemtn't Editor Three new hair styles vie for top honors this spring. Gently reminiscent of the 30s, hair is worn seven to eight inches longer. It just skims the shoulder in a fluid, rolled line. The hair is not sculptured to the head, but rolled away, held out from the crown, falling in big tosses at the ends. One advantage of this hair style is that you already have the bans for the second hairdo. Your longer hair will make it nossihle for you to wear it high on the crown, with a narrow, regal lnlr j I Iho Inn This arrangement is simple to handle. Just comb the tionl to ward the back, tease the undcr layers inlo a virtual briar nest, and brush the nverlayers smooth ly across it. The back is taken straight up from the nape of the neck and pinned flat. The sides should be swept up in arcs to ward the center of the crown with underlayers teased to hold the hair out from the head. A popular short hairdo this spring is the return to the shingle. But it is at least an inch longer Ihan the style o the 2s, with Her Patience Pays Off For I i. I nOilQ ICGDDSQ LOS ANGELES (AP) Thirty five years ago, Airs. Emerald Bar man Arbogast, American Alother of I960, was faced with a frighten ing dilemma: Her sixth child was i Mongo loid. She had two choices: put the child away, or keep him. "People told me, 'get the child out of sight. Put him in an insti tution,' " says Airs. Arbogast. "That was the way it was done, then." Airs. Arbogast called her family together and let them vote be cause the child would be Ihcir problem, loo. "He was born to this family," she says. "He is one of us. Are we going lo accept the fact and meet it as a challenge?" The family gave her a vote of confidence. And Airs. Arbogast started on a pioneering venture in child therapy. The results of her decision: The son, Granl. lodav lives near-normal life, plays the piano. paints, rides horses. He's one of ine happiest people in town. i , . f01e me. When she started caring for her own son he could neither walk nor talk. She searched libraries for books on care of the Alongoloid child. There were none. She started from the beginning, developing her own techniques. Some she borrowed from methods used in teaching Helen Keller. It required vast patience: leaching Grant to talk took 14 years. She saw early that her son need ed friends. She met Airs. Allen Ale Coy, fighting a similar go-it-alone struggle for her son, Jerry. They established a small school which grew, in lime, lo Los Angeles' na i tional v-known E Arm c Knnd ilinn .men s round, mon. tionally-known Exceptional Chil- "The Alongoloid child." explains Mrs. McCoy, "is an unfinished child. One whose brain develops too slowly. But he is capable of learning, slowly. "He is sensitive and easily con fused. His lessons must he re duced to simplicity and require much patience in the teaching." The keys to therapy, the moth ers found, were these: love, un derstanding and discipline. Some of their alumni are now attending puouc scnoois as a result of ther- , svn neiies. ann rn nrmi i ,m ii-,.m whites. Then all groups can b ! John Ihe Baalist Mexican rnln- memorate the saint by bathing in rivers and lakes on St John s Eve ! lo symbolically purify the soul j and bodv. decoratmir mihln- hathc uitK n.i- ers and streamers. Neatly-made plastic covers for clean witn the touch of a sud.v - snonse Thev ln rnmn in banilv for "cmcrsencv" situations sucii I as a child s birthday partv! the back tiered irregularly rather than severely planed off. The front will be worn flat, breaking inlo one wave across the eye, and the sides will be curled in wisps toward the face. If your hair is straight, you'll have trouble achieveing the con trolled look necessary to wear any of those three styles. And the sec ret lies '.n getting "under-cuiT' without looking too curly. What you need now is unper permanent to enable you to hold that memory of line. Among the three new hairdos one, at Ieat, will be right for i ' The look in sportswear for the gals this spring stresses pale col ors. But it also combines several fabrics and textures for co-rodi-naled separates. And just tor variety, several fabrics la lightweight knit, denim and gingham, for instance) are all dyed the same color and combined in one outfit. Pale colors are borrowed from other fashions of the season and worked inlo corduroy coats, jack- els, slacks, skirls and at-home cos- tunics. Ihee vary lrom bone, beige and off-white to dazzling while and can be worn with sharp colors as contrasl. The really classic trench coat is back this spring, in off-white and in wide wale corduroy. The per fect traveler, it's also a good stay-at-home. Separates carry right on into evening this year. Alter dark, they lake on a true elegance, shedding their casual ways. The long skirt nas fortunately, replaced narrow pants for al-hoine wear. Washables, particularly fine lin ens, should be laundered frequent ly. This professional advice comes from Irving Bobbins, who operates the "Madame Bicbor Fine Hand Laundry" in New York City. This establishment has been "taking' in" the washing of such wealthy social leaders as the Van derbilt' for the past 50 years. "Washing prolongs the life of lin en." declare? Air. Robbins, "im proves its appearance, and keeps it from yellowing." Alcnlion of coin - operated ma chines conjures up thoughts of can dy, cigarettes, juke box music, and those wonderful automatic washers at self-service launderies. , Now comes the coin metered hair dryer, already highly popular in the South. If you're a do-it- I yoursclf er. just give yourself your weekly or twice-a-week snampoo and set, then pop down to Ihe cor ner drying establishment for a pro fessional finish to your beauty treatment. It's safe to wash second-hand baby furniture such as a crib or carriage with soap or deter gent suds, then use it with the complete assurance that it has been effectively sterilized. This advice conies from Dr. Wil liam Brady, nationally known med ical authority. V:wV VENETIA. Favored swim fashion of the year is the dress look. Here the draped sheath by the master of masters, Rose Marie Reid. A design that snips your waist, trims hips, adds height, accents the bust. Everything you could ask for in a swimsuit plus confidence! Bold rose print in Venetian glass colcfrs. Elastic bengaline, 10 18, 22.95. Other Swim Suits Start at 8.98 tiff 9BM Nobu's A" Knockout, All Agree HOLLYWOOD (AP) folks around filmlown consider Japan s Nubu McCarthy one of the most leauliful women in Ihe community known for ils lovely females. But the onetime Tokyo, model who married an American Army sergeant disagrees. "By Japanese standards I'm not pretly," she says. "I'm just a funny-face girl. The Japanese ideal is the long, 'narrow face, small lips. Aly face is real wide and I have big eyes and a big mouth. "But I think maybe their stand ards are changing a litlle." Nobu is getting along well in Hollywood alter an early bout wilh the language. "When I first came here," she says "1 just knew greetings and '1 love you." I thought 1 knew ev erylhing and then 1 found I didn't and 1 was scared to go out. But adjustment wasn't very hard for me. it's amazing the way peo ple helped me." Hollywood discovered Nobu when an agont spotted her in a restaurant. "When I first started I didn't like the movie business," she says. "Most of my dislike for movies, I think, was fear. "Acting is very hard, it's very difficult and I didn't know how lit do it and 1 had heard lots of scan dal about Hollywood and movie business. It was because of my ignorance on the .subject. "Now I read the script first before I couldn't do that so 1 can feel the person I'm going lo play. If it's a very dramatic pari, I start to cry." Has her status of- Japanese war bride caused any problems? "I never had such things," she says. "Yet I'm a very happy typo and if people do that maybe I don't notice it. ff they are prejudiced it's a pity for them. "t wrote an article fr a Jap anese magazine about how nice people have been here and I told them that when Americans and olher people come to Japan they should be nice to them. "Because, you know, some Jap anese are prejudiced, loo." To avoid, snags and runs, try laundering your nylons a new way in plastic foam stocking "valet." Tuck up to four pairs in til J pastel envelope with fold-over flap. Squeeze it in warm soap or de tergent suds, and you'll squish up one of the richest lathers you've ever seen. Rinse thoroughly in the "bag" and squeeze again. No blol ling is necessary. The valet can be hung by ils loop lo dry, and used helwccn washings or while traveling as a hoisery hamper. No matter what method you use to launder sweaters, wash them often. The pale, cool colors popu lar for spring and summer must be kept immaculate. 0 9 CO 3i3