Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, August 21, 1941, Image 6

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    p.geSix. THE HEOISTER.QUARD, EUQgNE. OREGOH , j. J
1 i rVrlrinrir T
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Sororities Entertain
Thursday Eve With
Picnic and Coffee
FIRST OF a series of entertainments honoring Eugene
women entering the University of Oregon this fall will
be a coffee given by the Alpha Delta Pi sorority and a
picnic by Alpha Omicron Pi, both events to be Thursday
evening. The summer rushing period opened Aug. 18 and
will close Aug. i.
At Jewett Home
Active and alumnae ir lembers of
Alpha Delta Pi will entertain with
a coffee honoring prospective coeds
and their mothers at the home of
Mrs. W. H. Jewett from eight to
ten o'clock. Mrs. Duane Himber
and Mrs. Melvln Hargraves will
pour.
Janice Flndtner Is general chair
man of the committee for the af
fair and assisting her are: Bette
Workman, Fontelle Mitchell and
Beverly Sutton. The yard of the
Jewett home, 2455 Falrmount
Heights, will be used for receiv
ing guests If the weather permits.
Picnic at Six-Thirty
Alpha Omicron Pi actives and
alumnae will entertain a group of
Eugene girls with a picnic at the
home of Miss Dorothy Flanery in
Springfield at six-thirty o'clock.
Assisting Miss Flanery with plans
Is Mrs. Elmer Fansett, president
of the alumnae club.
POSTPONE MEETING
The meeting of Getchell club
of the B. N. A. scheduled for Fri
day evening has been postponed
1 until Sept. 26.
FROM NEBRASKA
Mrs. R. L. Williams of Lincoln,
Neb., accompanied by Mrs. C. L.
Hull, also of Lincoln, is visiting at
the home of her brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. W.
Simpson, on the Lorane highway
and also at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. F. M. Spicer In Eugene.
PICNIC FRIDAY
The Neighbors of Woodcraft
lodge will hold a picnic Friday
evening at six o'clock at the home
"of Mrs. Alberta S. McMurphey.
Members are to bring their own
dinners but coffee will be served.
FROM OKLAHOMA
Mrs. Winston Allard from Okla
homa City, Oklahoma, is a guest
In Eugene at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy Morse. Lieutenant Al
lard Is now on active duty with
the IT. S. army air corps at Will
Rogers field in Oklahoma City
where he is School's Officer at the
base. At the time he was called
to active duty in April he was an
instructor in journalism at the
University of Iowa. He hopes to
drive west In September to join
Mrs. Allard. Both Mr. and Mrs.
Allard are graduates of the Uni
verslty of Oregon.
Fortnightly Club
Gives Book
To City Library
The Fortnightly club of Zugene
has presented the Eugene public
library with a copy of "Trench
Cathedral Windows of the Twelfth
and Thirteenth Centuries' edited
by Marcel Aubert In memory .of
Mrs. Sarah A. Evans.
Mrs. Evans was for ten years
the president of the Oregon Feder
ation of Women's clubs. This as
a part of the campaign under way
all over the state to place a living
and lasting memorial in the form
of books in public libraries in ap
preciation of the work done by
Mrs. Evans.
The book contains nineteen
plates in twelve colors and Is
taken directly from the originals.
The plates are now especially val
uable and interesting as some of
the French cathedrals from which
some of the plates were taken have
been destroyed by tne recent
bombings in that country.
Grasulak-Hctstings
Wedding Is Read
At a simple ceremony at St.
Mary's Catholic church rectory
last Friday evening, Miss Mary
Grasulak, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Metro H. Grasulak of Bel-
field, North Dakota, was married
to James L. Hastings, son of Mrs.
Charles Hastings, of Eugene.
Father Gerache read the service.
The bride was dressed in floor
length white satin fashioned with
a square neckline and long train.
She wore a finger tip veil and
carried a bouquet , of Cecil Bruner
roses.
The couple were attended by
Mrs. Mabel Grasulak, sister-in-law
of the bride, and William
Grasulak, the bride's brother. A
reception was held at the home
of the bridegroom after the cere
mony. Following a trip to Crater
lake, Mr. and Mrs. Grasulak will
make their home in Eugene.
fr-X few
1 .
Kr-V-.l.':--..v
MISS ROBERTA PUTMAN,
president of the T beta Rho con
vention to be held Friday evening
In Eugene. A group of 100 f iris
are expected to attend. -
Baker-Rickabaugh
Wedding July 30
Is Announced
Announcement was made here
this week of the marriage of Miss
Alice Baker, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles F. Baker of Elmira,
to Jack Rickabaugh, son of Mrs.
Lewis Rickabaugh of this city, in
Hollywood. The ceremony took
place July 30 in the Hollywood
Congregational church.
Mrs. Oswald Burghardt of Los
Angeles was maid of honor for
Miss Baker and Mr. Burghardt
was best man for Mr. Rickabaugh.
Mr. and Mrs. Rickabaugh will
make their home in Los Angeles.
Mrs. Rickabaugh was employed
at the" Heilig theater during the
past two years. Mr. Rickabaugh
is a graduate of Eugene high
school and is now working for
Lockheed plant.
Sfove Designed
As Smokeless
For nearly two centuries, St.
Paul's cathedral, London, was
without bells. Its chimes were in
stalled about 60 years ago.
6QRD7
Be Ready For Fall..
In
Sport Suits
$1975
Imported Pure Wool Shetlands,
man tailored with a jaunty long
jacket . . . teamed with pleated
back and front skirt. In Ginger
Brown, Pine Green, Mineral Blue,
Camel Beige and Violet Sizes 12
to 20 . . , and only $10.75.
Clever new Plaid Her
ringbone and tweed
woolen sport suits in
smartly tailored styles,
becoming fall shades.
They are classroom
requirements.
Priced
$12 95 1. ?22 "
Dressmaker and Tail
ored Suits in dressy
twills, needle point and
worsteds, in black and
fall colors.
'19 " to $24 "
New Fall Blouses
fl.98
ill
T
Stunning saw shirt blouiea
with new convertible neck
lines. Long or short sleeves.
White and colon. Size 82 to
40. Only $1.65.
New Fall Fashions Arriving Daily!
We Invite Your Inspection
B.P.W.Plan
To Attend
Conference
BELLEVILLE, 111. 01.(9 When
Neal van Hoose' soft-coal mine
near Belleville was shut down by
restrictions Imposed by the strhv
gent. St. Louis anti-smoke ordin
ance, he resolved to do something
about it.
Now he's announced the inven
tion of a downdraft stove which
not only will burn any type coal,
including the very poorest, accord.
ing to the Rlngelman chart for
smoke density, without smoke, but
also will heat the average home on
about half as much coal.
Van Hoose' stove is U-shaped.
The Braft passes down through
the coal in the hopper while the
fire burns upward. For the past
year he's experimented with the
stove in his own home and says
that it uses about half the coal he
used previously.
Van Hoose says that he once
put 100 pounds of the cheapest
coal in the hopper and banked the
fire. The fire lasted for one week.
He estimates that the stove can
be manufactured to retail for
about $30 because there is no
mechanism. Units can be set into
furnaces already installed, he says.
Until passage of the strict anti-
smoke ordinance in 1940 the
southern Illinois mines supplied
virtually all coal used in St. Louis.
A GROUP of twenty-two
members of the Eugene
Business and Profes
sional Women's club is plan
ning to attend a two-day
South Willamette district con
ference of the Oregon Federa
tion of Business and Profes
sional Women at Albany.
The program will open Sat
urday evening with an executive
council meeting and garden party.
Sunday morning will,be given over
to forms and reports at a business
session and a luncheon will be
held Sunday noon at the Albany
hotel.
Those going from the Eugene
club are: Dr. Victory Morris, Mrs.
Perry Walbridge, Mrs. Lyman C.
Palmer, Mrs. Glenn Flrtle, Mrs.
R. W. Schiska, Mrs. Mildred Hall,
Miss Geneva Blaine, Miss Thelma
Neaville, Miss Clara Nasholm,
Mrs. Belle Lydlck, Miss Eleanor
Skene, Mrs. J. C. Branlman, Mrs.
Genevieve Turnipseed, Mrs. Greta
Buckingham, Mrs. Harold Jensen,
Mrs. Madge Gordon, Miss Emily
Hedblum, Mrs. D. C. Lindgren,
Dr. Ella Meade, Miss M. Ethel
Taylor, Mrs. Clarence V. Simon,
and Mrs. J. F. White.
. ,
TODAY'S RECIPE
By NEA Service
Fish Fondue
I cup hot milk
1 cup soft bread cubes
2-3 cup cooked fish (any kind)
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
teaspoon celery salt
teaspoon salt
1-8 teaspoon paprika .
2 tablespoons butter, melted
3 egg yolks
3 egg whites beaten
Soak bread and milk 5 minutes.
Add rest of ingredients. Bake in
buttered baking dish 40 minutes
In moderately slow oven (325).
Berry Chiffon Pie
2-3 cup sugar
teaspoon salt
1 cup berry juice
1 cup berries
3 egg yolks, beaten
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon grated lemon rind
1 tablespoon granulated gelatin
Vi cup orange juice
3 egg white, beaten
Vi cup whipped cream
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 baked or crumb crust
Mix sugar, salt, juice, berries
and yolks. Cook in double boiler
until slightly thick. Add lemon
juice and rind and gelatin, soaked
5 minutes in orange juice. Mix
and cool. Chill until quivery, then
fold in whites, cream and vanilla.
Pour into crust and chill until
firm.
Ripe olives "pair-off" deliclous-
ly with avocados served in salad
or cocktail blends. Serve the
olives sliced, placed over the top
or mixed directly into the avocado.
In 1940, world production of
crude oil amounted to about 2,
150,000,000 barrels and produc
tion of related fuels (natural) gas
oline, benzol, synthetic mineral oils
from coal and oil shale, and other
fuels) was estimated at 110,000,
000 barrels, making total produc
tion 2,280,000,000 barrels.
A total of 2,466,058 pounds of
copra was expoated to the United
States from the Island of Guam
in 1940, according to the Census
Bureau. In the same year, 409,
128 pounds were shipped to the
Philippine Islands and 444,204 to
Japan.
Greeting Cards
For All Occasions
CRESSEYS'
Booksellers A Stationers
4 Willamette Phono $46
The herbal laxative capiule
remedy has many thousands
of Mtiiitd UMr. Its record
of having sold over two mil
lien bout since It n lint
introduced rwaln for iuwlf.
You should take the pre
caution to maintain good
eliminitlon at all timet, but
when cenitipatlon and kindred
ailments occur it Is sometime!
necenary to
give definite
aid to the
THEN get
comfort-air.
IngKauGoN
at your drug
KruGon li Mid by Blron"i
Everybody's Drag Store, 986
Willamette, Eugene, and by
leading drogglste.
STUDENTS-STYLISH TO BOOT! Campus boots of rubber In
red, white, blue, russet, black and various combinations of all of
these are news. Some students wear them high. Others will turn
them down so that gay plaid linings show, as at left. The co-ed at
the right wears the new cowboy boot the Buckaroo. (NEA service)
Error In Young
Wedding Corrected
The Register-Guard wishes to
correct the error appearing in the
story of the wedding of Miss
Brandon Young in Wednesday's
paper. The mistake was caused
by transposed, correction lines in
the makeup of the paper. The
paragraphs should have read:
Greeting at the door were Miss
Sally Ford and Miss Robirda
Flaten, cousins of the bride. Little
Miss Sally Calkins passed the
bridegroom's cake.
Mr. and Mrs. Southworth left
Immediately for Duluth by way of
San Francisco and Salt Lake City.
They will also visit his parents
in Sparta, 111,, and will be at home
in Duluth after Sept. 1. For going
away the bride wore a three piece
beige suit with brown velvet col
lar, brown hat and accessories, and
a corsage of brown orchids.
Attesting to the growing popu
larity of home movies, is the in
crease in production of motion
picture projectors using film of
sub-standard gauge, chiefly 16mm.
and 8 mm. reported by the Cen
sus Bureau. In 1939, projectors
of this type manufactured In the
United States numbered 134,515
valued at $6,302,734 compared
with 1937 figures, 114,593 and
$4,869,156. .
CAN'T
GRA
HER
GRANDMA
(EEP
IN
CHAIR
She's as Lively as a Youngster-
Now her Backache is better
Many sufferers relieve ngftg bewkaotte
quickly, odco they discover that the real
uum of their trouble may be tired kidney.
The kidneys are Nature1! ehief way of tak
Ing the excess acids and wuta out of the
blood. They help most people paai about 2
pint a day.
When disorder of kidney function permit
poisonous matter to remain in your Mood, 1
may cause nagging backache, rheumatic pains,
leg pains, loss of pop and energy, getting up
nights, swelling, pui&neas under the eyes,
headaches and dlisineae. Frequent or scanty
passages with smarting and burning some
tunes shows there is something wrong with
"j'P vi uuuusti
Don't Wkitt AaV vnur s4m4. T..
Pills, nsedi successfully by mUlkus for ever
40 years. They give happy relief and will help
the 15 miles of kidney tubes flush out poison
ous wast from your blood. Get Doss's FlUa
f COMPLETE
I FEMININE
I HYGIENE
L DBMASTDSt J
MUCH his been written about feminine
hygiene. But too often women over
look hygiene in the REAL sense of
the word underarm cleanliness and
sweetness. You cannot be attractive with
underarms moist, stained and smelly.
Use Arrid, the new cream deodorant,
li Arrid iea oot tot dram, dots sot
Irriutt akia.
J, No wilting to dry. Cia be and (tabs
aftet ihivioj.
t, lamed checks rwnpirarfoa 1 to J dm.
Ktnovei odor iioa puipintioa. km
armpit, dry.
t, Arrid Is a part, wain, grttrelMS, sl
Jen Yinuhinf crtua.
f. Awtrdtd fptovtl Sell of Ataerleu Ttu
tun of Ltuadtrias u bumltn to fabric.
Women use more Arrid thtn any other
deodorant Try a 10 J9, or 59 ju to.
dl at ajrjr Itpiejsbiih kU (fijjet food
Dinner Party Will
Honor Visitors
SPRINGFIELD, Aug. 21 (Spe
cial) Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Fish of
Chase Gardens will entertain at
a dinner party Thursday evening,
honoring Alma Fish Shipley, Los
Angeles, Mrs. Emmett Maine and
daughter Emmalene, Scio, and
Ernie Farnum, Los Angeles. Mrs.
Fresh Every Day
Date Nut Bread
Shipley and Mrs. Maine are Mr.
ana Mrs. Fisn's daughters.
Additional guests at dinner will
be Mrs. John Deeds and her son
James of Montezuma, Kansas, Mr.
and Mrs. Warren Deeds and Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin Deeds of Springfield.
Mr. and Mrs. Fish's house guests
will be here for 10 days.
Thimble Club Meets
At Barnett Home
Mrs. Alma Rowling was hostess
for the Santa Clara Thimble club
Wednesday afternoon at the home
of Mrs. A. F. Barnett, 1701 Fair
mount, Eugene. After the business
meeting, poems and incidents of
school days were given. Mrs. E. E.
Bissell of Earlham, Iowa, and Mrs,
A. F. Barnett were visitors.
Mrs. Barnett and Mrs. Baldwin
assisted in serving refreshments,
Mrs. Robinson will entertain the
club at her home Sept. 17.
Mrs. E. H. Vogt and Mrs. H,
Sederlin are on the program com
Thursday
6:80 p. m. Young Business
Women's club dinner at Del
Rey cafe.
S p. m B. Y. bridge club at
home of Mrs. Lei Pearson, 884
Thirteenth avenue east
Friday
8 p. m. N. O. W. picnic at
home of Mrs. Alberta S. Mc
Murphey. 7 p. m. Theta Rho conven
tion at I. O. O. F. hall.
8 p. m. Women of Moose
regular meeting at Moose hall
. ;
The 48 states received almost
4.7 billion dollar In revenues In
1938, according to the Census,
and spent 4.0 billion dollars In
cost-payments for the genera
government. The excess of rev
enues over expenditures was due
to collections for unemployment
compensation which s were de
posited in reserve funds for fu
ture use.
Honor g5a
DeCou.Wed'nSll
or of mi.. . "."""luiiJ
Mrs. R, n v22d,r,2
fUMtofhonorZl
'Cou.ervlT
SElBY
RCByn,
LURCH'S
'HI
The United States imported
662,577 pounds of inedible tallow
during the second quarter of 1940.
University Phone
Business 2'81-M
College
FALL TERM STARTS
September 2, 1941
REGISTER NOW
"A Complete Business Course"
860 Willamette, Eugene
i iiiiiiiuiitiii u ninii i ii ti ujjttttj utLrujjiii in um li ujiisiiriiiaiiiiiiiin Diiiuriitruii,ii uiiiTiiiiiiiiiiin in umii uiiiiunjfl.iMjiitf rrrrrriijnjniitaiiiuiri itiiiiiiin n iiiftim iiiiiiNiitiiiuii hit
It. Is' Our Pleasure
to Present
the forerunners of
Autumn Fashions
In
COLLEGE CLOTHES
FOR YOUR APPROVAL
MILLINERY,
SKIRTS - SWEATERS JACKETS
COATS - REVERSIBLES - RAINCOATS
AND THE FAMOUS
Doris Dodson Junior Classic
DRESSES that ore most outstanding and highly
approved by those who wear them. We invite
you to make cm early inspection.
BROADWA
Tearing appartb dry goods
20 30 EAST BROADWAY
iiuiuiiiiiiliiiii rriiiiiiiii iimiiiiiHtNti nuniii iiimiii niiiimuiiiiiiun i u n ibS5J53
The Broadway, Inc.
Presents . . . J
Ogs! Ensembles of
i
Home Beautifying Fabrics
For Your Shopping Convenience
It's exciting and thrilling when you discover the
color groups that offer the most effective tones, ail
what satisfaction to harmonize draperies, curtilm
and furnishings into a beautifully blended room
scheme. The Broadway, Inc. does these things for
you with attractive, moderate priced merchandise,
Rayon Damaaki, Homespuns.
Chintz and Sail Cloth
in beautiful prints and plain colors,
brocaded effects and stripes. Prices
from
49c
yard to
$2.49
Quaker and Zion Lace Panels
in a smart grouping of
new designs ..........
98c
Washable rayon marquisette panels
in ivory, ecru and white .......
Rayon panels very sheer and
really beautiful . .
i
1
DECORATIVE SERVICE WITHOUT CHAW :
We Make Draperies to Tour Special Order j
We're Very Proud to Offer- '
Cabin Craft Chenille v
BEDSPREADS
To our way of thtottt
other line presenti ratttj
qulsite beauty of dedy
color combtattoMj
W caforareason-Wf,
'4,95 1,
The Finest
KM
Mills m-
Wool Blankets
and the highest values are
to be found in the Broad
way, Inc.
We are showing
The Various Sites,
qualities and colors in a
complete range of
Pendleton Woolen
Kert& Star Woolen Mils blankets V
Kenwood Woolen Mule blankets .
FcDibault Woolen Mils blankets ' '
On Health Woolen Mills blankets ;
Sites from 88x84 to 80x90 m i,
$7 95 1$
Meed from - 'w
-wearing apparel
1 U-IO EAST BB0ADWT