lay 0 - . Costume Party Enjoyable Occasion - V. . . . M I . . ,t, . . imMrnMimr miUT 4 : 'T"t " " x ' - 1 MR. DON KRUSE of Riversdale transformed her lovely home into o coffee house for the "beatnik" party enjoy ed recently by members of Beta lota of ESA. Expresso coffee, games and entertainment were featured. Prize for the best dressed beatnik was awarded to Mrs. Robert Wil son with Mrs. Kenneth Smith and Mrs. Gib Hal left as run-ners-up. A special attraction was presented by the "Kingston Trio," pantomimed by Mrs. Charles Bailey, Mrs. Floyd Irwin and Mrs. Mike Wooton. Pictured above, back row, left to right, are Mrs. William Werth, Mrs. Don Rogan, Mrs. Bill Madson, Mrs.' Dolph Boyer, Mrs. Bill Marsters, Mrs. Bob Bashford, Mrs. Charles Bailey and Mrs. Jack Mathis. Second row: Mrs. Gib Hallet, Mrs. Dick Berney, Mrs. Dick Mann Mrs. Robert Wilson and Mrs. Floyd Irwin. Seated: Mrs. Mike Wooton, Mrs. Joe Sinko, Mrs. Don Josh and Mrs. Kenneth Smith. (Chris' Studio of Photography.) U Of 0 Mothers Slate Meeting The University of Oreeon Molh er' Club will hold its first fall meeting Monday, Oct. 17, at the home of Mrs. Harry Winter. 535 W. Harvard. A dessert supper will be served at 7:30 p.m. Mothers of U of 0 freshmen will be honored and are especially in vited to attend, as well as nothers of i second, third and fourth-year students. Mrs. William Thompson and Mrs. 0. F. Richman will be co-hostesses. Plans for the year will be out lined at tne meeting. Dinner Party Given By Lanes At Garden Valley Mr. and Mrs. Francis Lane of Garden Valley entertained at a din ner party alter bunday school. Covers were placed for the Miss es Mary Becker and Jeanette Beck er of Salem, Mrs. George Munson and the hosts children, u a v l a, Danny Tommy and Debbie. The pleasant afternoon hours were spent in visiting. . Mrs. Bill Gilbert Feted Stephanie Thomas entertained a small group of schoolmates and close friends at a personal shower for Mrs. Bill Gilbert Sunday at the Methodist Church annex in Wilbur. The girls played pencil and paper games and visited. Besides the hostess and guest of honor, refresh ments were served to Maria Bros zio, Shirley Harvey and Sharon Bintliff. ; Card Party Is Slated Melrose Grange has invited the public to a pinocme party Satur day at 8 p.m. Prizes will be award ed and refreshments served. Luncheon Charminq Gorgeous arrangements of dah lias and other fall flowers formed the decorative motif for the charm ing 1 o'clock luncheon given Thurs day as a second of a series of part ies to be given by Mrs. Gordon Smith and Mrs. Fred Lockwood at the former's beautiful Laurel wood home. Guests invited to enjoy the oc casion with Mrs. Lockwood and Mrs. Smith were Mrs. C. M. Teague, Mrs. Paul H. Helweg, Mrs. Harris Ellsworth, Miss Helen Casey, Mrs. Arthur Clarke, Mrs. John H. Robinson, Mrs. James Aiken, Mrs. Virgil Lomax, Mrs. 0. B. Petersen, Mrs. Waller Fish er. Mrs. D. W. Hclliwell, Mrs. Keith Bryant, Mrs. Edward M. Murphy, Mrs. S. J. cooper, Mrs. a. a. Party Affair Honored Here To compliment Dr. James Mil lar of Portland, formerly pastor of the First Presbyterian Church here, and Miss Virginia Macken zie, of Duarte, Calif., who has just retired after 40 -years in the mis sionary field in Japan, a charming reception was given at tne fresDy. terian Church Sunday evening be fore the church service. Miss Mackenzie was a speaker at the evening service and Dr. Millar was the speaker at both the morning and evening services. Young, Mrs. W. L. Tozer, Mrs. B. L. Hardenbrook, Mrs. A. A. Wilder, Mrs. Roy Catching, Mrs. Glenn Gibbons. Mrs. Elton V. Jack son, Mrs. Robert H. Savage and Mrs. Kenneth Kirk. -High score prize for the after noon s contract bridge play was won by Mrs. Petersen with Mrs. Young winning the second high score prize. Mrs. Graves Is Hostess To Friendly Hour Club The Melrose Friendly Hour Club met Wednesday at the borne of Mrs. G. G. Graves. Games and visiting were enjoy' ed by the Mesdames D. Rainville M. Claflin. Arthur Falkner. O. F. Stringer and Mildred; Mitchell Benedict and daughter; Roland Check and Cheri; E. R. Fenn, Joel Fenn, Fred Miller, Clarence uoncu ana u. u. my. Mrs. Graves served lovely re freshments. The next meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Benedict for an all day affair Oct. 12. Kruse Families Hosts At Dinner Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Kruse and Mr. and Mrs. Don Kruse enter tained at a 6:30 p.m. dinner at the Riversdale home of the former Sunday evening. Guests for the af- lair included their employes and their husbands and wives who worked during the cantaloupe har vest. Those enjoying the dinner and pleasant evening of visiting with the ti. d. ana Don Kruscs were Mr. and Mrs. Bill Mathews. Mr, and Mrs. Don Harmon, Mr. and Mrs. Darwin Lee, Mr. and Mrs, Dick Brown and Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Mabley. Oregon Chapter 57, OES To Fete 50-Year Members Oregon Cnapter 57, OES met Wednesday evening at the Mason ic Temple in Canyonville, with Mrs, Ray Wright, W. M., and Ray Wright, W.F., presiding. Mrs. Guy McGce and Mrs. Law rence Michaels served refresh ments to the group at the close of the meeting using "birds going south" as their table decorations theme. Mrs. Henry Green of Ohio, visiting relatives here, was a guest of the chapter. Past matrons and patrons and 50-year members will be honored at the next meeting of the group, Wednesday, Oct. 19. UptPlayls Held Sunday !Roseburg Unit, American Con tract Bridge League met at the Umpqua Hotel Sunday evening for the regular master point play. North-South winners were Dr. and Mrs. James Harris, first; Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Patterson, second, and Mrs. W. K. Johnson and Mrs. H. A. Royle of Canyonville, third. East-West winners were M r s. Lennart Carlson and Mrs. Robert Jones of Myrtle Creek, first; Mrs. W. C. Callison and Mrs. Lyle Bo denner, second, and Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Bruffy, third. The special events party planned for October has been cancelled on account of the sectional to be hold Oct. 21-22-23 at the Eugene Hotel. All duplicate players interested are eligible to play in the sectional. Two Boys Honored Sunday Afternoon Mr. and Mrs. Allen J. Reed and son, Donnie, of Sunny Valley were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don Blakely and son, John ny, in Glendale Sunday afternoon. tho two families joined in cclo brating the first birthdavs of the two youngsters who were born on the same day, Oct. 8, 1959, at the Josephine General Hospital. Gifts were exchanged. Mrs. Reed had baked the birthday cake which was suitably inscribed and decor ated with cut-out fares o Micky Mouse and Donald Duck. Family Party Is Event Of Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Fred Alberlus en- tertained several members of their families Sunday at their home in Winston to honor the latter's broth er, Sgt. 1-C Lewis H. Royer. who here after SDcndine the oast three years in Germany. Places were laid for Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Eastman of Eugene, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Albertus and son, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Albertus and the host and hostess. Royer will depart the middle of the week for Fort Ord, Calif.. where he will be stationed. Embroidery Club Members Hosted The Roseburg Art and Embroid ery uuo was entertained Wednes- aay at the home of Mrs. C. R. t rance, 838 tE Brockway Ave. Those present were Mrs. Lvle Hibbard, Mrs. Henry Snyder, Mrs. Martha Erskine. Mrs. Walter Rus sell, Mrs. Earl Decker, Mrs. Fan nie Betts, Mrs, Ed Deal, Mrs. Mar tin Schneider and Mrs. LaVerna Lark. Members enioycd the homemade candy and delicious refreshments served by Mrs. France. The next meeting will be Oct. 19 at the home of Mrs. Henry Sny der, 1421 SE Cobb, at 2 p.m. Frl., Oct. 14, 1960 Th Newi-Rtviw, Rewburg, Ore. S Pose With "Miss Congenialty" fT , w r- - f 7- 0 ' v 4 '' Mi w ' V"- V ' H a a PICTURED ABOVE are Mr. and Mrs. Bill Haves with Sue Talbert, Miss New York State, who was recently crowned Miss Congeniality at the Miss America Pageant in Atlantic City, N. J. Mrs. Hayes is the former Janet Geraidine Galla and Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Emil Galla, Rt. 3 Roseburg. : ' " ' Glendale Women Guests Sunday Elma Archambeau, Flo rence Johnson, Stella Smith, Ger trude Lystul and Alice Ncbel, all of Glendale, wore recent dinner guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Tneile of Dixonv 1 e. Mrs. Theile was Glendale com mercial teacher for two years, Rhonda Jo Garrison Has Birthday Luncheon Party One of the loveliest birthday; parties of the fall look place Fri day, Oct. 7, when Mrs. Bart Gar rison emcnainea ai a lunwnuuu party in compliment to her daugh ter, Rhonda Jo, on her fourth birthday. , Childrcns' tables were small, af fniris rtnonrnted with colorful an niversary cloths, gay balloons and favors. Lovely gifts were present ed to Rhonda Jo from Mrs. Wil liam Sims and Linda and Scott; Mrs. Ted Ranlett and Shollcy and Ellen; Mrs. Leslie West and Brad and Lisa; Mrs. Michael Coen and Michelle, Mari and Ricky; Mrs. Thomas Garrison and Theresa: Mrs. Bill Garrison and Mark and Mike; Mrs. Milton Hard and Ste phen; Mrs. Del Mobley and Kurt; Mrs. Pat Van Cleave and Valda; Mrs. Waller Combs and David, and Mrs. Walter Youngcn and Charley and Barbara. A very beautifully decorated Cin derella doll cake was cut and serv ed with the deBscrt-courae. Games were played and Kurt Mobley won the first prize with Brad West winning the second prize and Charley Youngcn, the third prize. Dinner Enjoyed At Brand Home Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Brand en tertained as dinner guests Tues day evening at their attractive . Westmoreland home, their daugh- - tcr, Mrs. Robert Burton, of Ban don, and Mrs. Alfred S. Tyson and children, cnanoue ana sieve. Mrs. Burton is spending several days here with her parents, while her husband attends the Diocese of Olympia Episcopal conference at Surftides at Oceanlake. Father, Tyson also spent the week attend ing the conference. Hairpieces Add Beauty To Face By GAILE DUGAS NE Womtn'i Editor There's no arguing the point that the right hairdo can make a big difference in a gal's appear ance. But most of us are faced with one or more problems when we try to wear our hair the way it would become us best. If your face is long and narrow, you need enough hair, with good spring and body, to widen your hair style and give your face a softer, more oval appearance. On the other hand, should your face be too round or too square, you New Ball-Type Valve Points Way To Normal Life For Heart Victims Raspberry Filling Danish Angel Food Cake Adds ke of Old World Dessert Sph d Sae-M . ' : .... ' . j . 1 ' " - '.'5 i . ... . j . ,,, y Toll elerint looklnr Antel Food Dnlh Cake I a homemade masterpl - It Is truly s new world dtwert with an eld world flavor. This elegant party cake Is a pretty dessert answer for sum mertime teas, buffets and par ties. It is an Angel Food Danish Cake ... a Wmcmade master piece. And, it ha only six in gradients! You Just scoop out a ring from the center of a bakery or homemade angel food cake nd fill it with tansy red Currant-Raspberry Danish dcsiert and raspberries Frost.wiU Whipped cream. W Tht cakt U truly a new world dessert with an old world flavor because Danish Dessert Is a pudding patterned after the na tional dessert of Denmark. "Rodgrod," which Brst appeared In Danish cook books as early as 1611. Literally translated. "Roderod" mean "red pud ding." In fact, manyther countries have a favontNerry pudding similar to Danish Des sert In Norway it is known as "Rod Grot." in Sweden it is called "Safam" and in Ger many this same dessert Is callttl "Rote Gruetze." i No matter what Its name, this exciting cake filling makes your dessert out of the ordinary and distinctive. The cake is espe cially pretty when it is cut and your guests can see its colorful marbled effect Summertime cakes take on a new look when frosted with a fluffy coat of dairy delicious whipped cream. Dairy foods are in abundance during the cum mer months and whipped top- -pings can be used to decorate many desserts. ANGEL FOOD DANISH CAKE 12 servings 1 10" (large slie) angel food cake 1 cup canned or froten raspber ries, well drained 1 cups Uquld (raspberry Juice and water) 1 package Currant-Raspberry Danish Dessert 1 cup heavy cream, whipped H teaspoon true vanilla extract Buy a large size angel food cake or prepare one from a mix. Cut down Into the cake 1 from outer edge and 1 from middle hole, leaving a substantial wall of cake about 1' thick and a 1 base at the bottom. Carefully . remove center with a. spoon. Place on a serving plate. Stir contents of package Dan ish Dessert into raspberry Juice and water. Bring to a boil; boil for 1 minute only, stirring con stantly. Cool, then fold in rasp berries. Chill 3 to 4 hours. Fill cake center with chilled Danish Dessert Fold vanilla ex tract into whipped cream and frost sides and top of cake. Re frigerate until firm. PORTLAND AP) Surgeons opened the heart of a 52-year-old Spokane, Wash., man three weeks ago today. They found the mitral valve so badly damaged there was no hope it could ever work again. And so they sewed in an artificial valve a silicone rubber ball trapped In a plastic cage. This, said a University of Ore gon Medical School spokesman to day, was a major breakthrough in heart surgery that could lead to normal lives for many thous ands now crippled by a defective mural valve. Philip Amundson of Spokane is the man with the first ball-type mitral valve in his heart. "I feel just fine," he said, and added he expected to return home soon. The story of the surgery was told today to the American Col lege of Surgeons at San Francisco by Dr. Albert Starr, assistant pro fessor of surgery at the Univer sity of Oregon Medical School. It was he and M. Lowell Edwards, owner of a Portland laboratory, who developed the valvo in two and a half years of work. It con sists of a ball three quarters of an inch in diameter that can move, with the heart's beat, in Klastic cage an inch and a half igh. The outer margin of the cage is of a cloth-like material stitched to the heart valve opening to anchor it in nlace. Other heart valves have been replaced artificial! v. but this the first known time for the mitral valve, the medical school report ed. And it added in a news re lease that this is especially im portant because it is the mitral valve that so often calcifies into hardness and fails to regulate the blood flow from the lungs. There are many thousands of people, it said, who need a wholly new mijjal valve. Amunfison suffered from rheu matic fever as a boy. This left car tissue on the mitral valve and the scar tissue calcified. Four years ago he underwent heart surgery to correct this, but got only temporary relief. Open heart surgery three weeks aim determined that only a new valve would help him, and a sur gical team put the Starr-Edwards valve into place. must heighten your hairstyle to elongate the appearance of your face. Anyone, In time, can let her hair grow to the necessary length. But there's little we can do about fine, thin hair that will not lend itself readily to the style that we'd like best. ' ' One contribution you, yourself, can make to tho appearance of your hair Is to keep it clean and shining at all times. Clean hair has more spring and life. . A soft permanent, with undcrcurl is an important factor, too. Aiinougn nairpieccs nave always been of invaluable help, they were usually made to be worn as a bun. roll or. braid. And these styles didn't always create the wanted effect. Today, they are much more versatile. The Coiffures Americana salons across the country have design ed some new hairpieces, called the roulette, the flair and the flip top. They are made of real hair that will plume and feather in any di rection you want them to go. They are expertly combed right into your own hair and matched exact ly to your hair color. What's more, they can be cleaned and re set right in the local salon. The woman who is shopping for a fur coat this year can expect to be offered the coat which is just exactly right for her. She will not be told that there's just one "look" which she must accept even if it's unbecoming. This great variety in silhouettes includes the princess lino and the cape effect, the stright coat In three-quarter length, the coat with width at the shoulder and the one that falls in a pronounced flair from a natural shoulder line. There will be more color in furs this year, too. Thos doesn't mean pink mink or red rabbit. It docs mean sealskin in its natural golden fawn color; charcoal gray for nu tria, beaver and sheared raccoon; new, radiant black for mink and fnx; beige and oyster white for the sheared furs. Leopard is Used sometimes In combination with other furs black Alaska fur seal or golden beaver. - Even the straight coats show a bit more body width than they did last year. But it's a width that is deftly handled so that it gives the wearer no hint of bulkincss. Pat Nixon Seasoned Political Campaigner NEWARK, N.J. (AP) In her quiet way, Patricia Nixon is as seasoned a political campaigner as her vice president husband. She's certainly been at it as long as he has. Her status as a valued compon ent of the Richard M. Nixon cam paign was raised to new eminence Monday. The vice president, leav ing Washington for a Southern for ay in Richmond, Va., and Char lotte, N.C., and winding up in this Northern industrial center, pro claimed this week "Pat Nixon Week." Mrs. Nixon frequently shares her husband's gruelling trips in sesrch of votes. At each stop Mon day the vice president made a point of talking about "Pat Nixon Week" and drawing attention to his wife. This is the way she operates: When the plane lands tho door swings up and out step the vice president and Pat on the folding stairway. They are smiling. She is poised and demurely dressed. Monday, it was a conservative gray suit, with white blouse show ing at the neck, and a gray-flecked cloche hat. At the airport the Nixnni go their separate ways to mingle with the crowd and shake hands along the fence. Mrs. Mixnn has a word and a smile for everyone. And she passes out cards autographed by the vice president. Tbcy arc engraved with the legend "the vice president of the United States," and signed In ink at tho bottom by Richard Nixon. There is great demand for them. When Nixon speaks day after day, Mrs. Nixon presents sn atti tudo of absorbed attention, though she has in most cases heard the same words many times. Her eyes stay on Nixon throughout his talk. A small smile stays on her lips. Almost Invariably tho vice pres ident opens his talk with a refer ence to his wife, if she Is travel ing with him. But perhaps she is at her best, irom ine vice president s view point, in her manner of dealing with crowds in a receiving line or at an airport reception. Sho shakes hands with all In reach, and has something to say to everyone. She thanks them for turning out and says she is glad to be back In whatever city they are visiting. She stoops to shake the hand of a shy little girl. She calls for more autographed cards to nana out. At Charlotte she caught sight of ai.an ci arms. carrying a little boy in his "His eves are blue lust like liii daddy's," she said, and passed on. The man smiled from ear to ear. Surely, one thought, Mrs. Nixon has nailed down at least one Re publican vote, 'HALF SIZES the look you love I ti- , ' Bright beginning for fall KAY WINDSOR HALF SIZES sculpts a serenely new and slimming look for your figure. A softly gathered scoop neckline is perked up with self fabrio bows to set the stage for this step-in, easy filling sheath. The fabric a luscious printed matte, jersey. In dramatic- fall tones ol brown, royal or purple. 14.95 Mark's Fashion Balcony SHOPPING CENTER 2527 W. HARVARD O 9 9