Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 21, 1948)
Cool Yjwte Something to Be TJkanhfut for, Say. JPatienh in oConff Yligkt tp , ff f1t MM I . .JL--.il -"I 5 I Wiltshire photo and engraving HOSPITAL AND CLINIC It was time for change of shifts: the "three to eleven" 4i.. i.irven to three" group was coming on, when the nhotoeranher arrived. Mrs. Gladys Griffin, Mrs. La Verne Perkins, Miss Clara Fries, Mrs. Viola King L J a r Mrs Gladys unum, -... ..., .,,aa i-ucs, mm. vmia ning r. .i.. w small Mrs. Finley, another of the staff of eleven-to-three nurses, was off aUU ("io that is a Pity, for tt was remembrance of Mrs. Flnley's sympathetic care Ljrtd tbss layout.) By ANN CONNELL ... nrw nnrsa nf District Five. Lwtirat this is the 75th, or Diamond Jubilee Year of I . i llnitoH Strifes. It is celebrated in haai nursing m -- - - Lihis month, and most specially in the week just past, fber 16 was Linda Richards Day, natal day of the learn to earn the rank ot regisierea nurss. L, II you know even one nurse, probably you ve learned present ambition ot the nurses to promote ute esiaonsu- t Eugene ol a registry oi nurses wmuu uuiu mm mo I-. u.rlvnr cart-lime, nursing service. La of the snortage ot nuie, v "j;;:"" bed into the matter of getting here a branch 6f the Visiting ISrr to this set-up, and Lane County is woefully short a . . ...h-h 4a1,4 Cn tha nracnnt nlan was ireiiare nurses, nicy wwq nu. v v.. r-"". " iM H homes where there is need of- a trained nurse hsi time each day, but not for full-time duty, to get this fit the same time, it would permit nurses who have home Id do not wish to engage in full-time work, to give their for a few hours each day, or only on one or two days 01 perhaps. . - wrson would be employed, on a. 24-hour basis, to take tele rills in her home (a suitable person already has been Because of the,jong hours, adequate salary must oe paid, Tier to et the system working the nurses feel they must- knd i sum sufficient to pay that salary for six months, or ill cam itself. fis end, the nurses have been busy recently with several firing schemes, such as rummage sales and bazaars and fteir newest plan is a sale, which we cannot discuss fully fcuse it has an element of chance, and federal mail regula raet publication of such details. However, anyone desirous H this plan and the community which needs it has only "y nurse 10 gam tun information. Or they may call irha Johnson. 5763-W: Miss Meditfin Wotcnn tir kit Richardson, the latter at Sacred Heart Hospital, 6600. Wiltshire photo and engraving FIRST SMILE to greet the gaze of many, a newborn baby, were it given them to see at birth, would be that of Miss Pearl Wolf, above, who for fifteen years has been at Sacred Heart Hos pital, in the "O-B" ward, and for fourteen years has been on night duty. Wiltshire photo and engraving NIGHT-DUTY NURSES in the West Wing ot Sacred Heart Hospital which houses the mater nity wards, are shown above, grouped about the "Incubator." From left they are: Mrs. Helen Grife, Mrs, Sarah Teters, Miss Eunice Hughes, Miss Edna Fitch and Mrs. Esther Carley (Mlsa Car ley's odd cap la a badge of Philadelphia General Hospital, one of the oldest training schools.) Heirloom Knitted Lace Is Edging for Bridal Veil III0 8EW . PTES HOME SPINSTERS TO MEET. ; Inlan Sewing Group BP m?et, M0"afy Fmujenome of Mrs. - I Foster, 1667 Fairmount home o Miss Kay Sharp, 990 K Monday afternoon at Twenty-first Avenue East. Miss P- Nnnpv Parliel urill nraeirio First Congregational Church saw the wedding last Sunday of Miss Frances Mae Acheson, .daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Acheson of Eugene, to Richard H. Bouey, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Bouey of Brownsville. The ceremony was read at three o'clock by the Rev. Wesley Goodson Nicholson. The bride wore a gown of ivory brocaded satin, made with sweetheart neckline, a fitted bodice with slightly dropped waistline, and a short train. Her fingertip veil of illusion was held by a braided tiara and edged with handknit lace, made by her great grandmother over sixty years ago. Another heir loom was a gold bracelet set With amethysts, which0had. been "a part of her mother's "wedding attire'. A strand of pearls she wore was the gift of the bride groom. She carried a white Bi ble topped by Cattleya orchids and stephanotis. Mrs. Donald Hensen served as matron of honor wearing a gown of blue taffeta, with a headdress and fan-shaped bo quet of pink carnations. Mrs. Kenneth Rutledge was another bridal attendant, wear ing a pink chiffon gown with head dress and fan shaped bou-. quet of blue carnations. Mrs. Acheson, mother of the bride wore a blue suit, and Mrs. Bouey wore a grey dross. Both had black accessories and Van- da orchid corsages. Donald Bouey, of Areata, Calif., brother of the bridegroom served as best man. William T. Ellis was another attendant. Ushers were Lawrence Valley,' Charles Sanders, Frank Miller and Keith David. The bride was (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2-B) Miss Jean Goodwin Married Wednesday An informal service at ten o'clock Wednesday morning, November 17, married Miss Jean Goodwin to Dorris A. Dilling ,ham, nt .First " Congregational. Church. The Rev. Wesley Good son Nicholson officiated at thr rites, in Condon chapel. Thr pair was unattended. Miss Goodwin wore a street dress of coffee-colored knit fab ric, with accessories in brown and gold. Miss Mary Grubbs played or gan music to accompany the ' ceremony. The couple will be at home on Arcadia Drive in Eugene. Mrs. Dillingham is the daughter of Mrs. V. David Goodwin, and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Dillingham. Both families are of Eugene. 3 1 II TsjfCT of .Jo ' - I'm - F, Bowtrt Ifiota wntahlr Ffhly Photo. WHtihtre cngravtntf MRS RICHARD H. BOVEY (Fnncca Ma Acheson) was ft bride M Ut Sunday, at Fint Conf relational Church. Horse Show Today Invites Public View , Numerous entries have been received for the Amateur Horse Show which Eugene Hunt Club will sponsor this afternoon in the covered arena -at the Fair . grounds. Riders from without the membership are invited to participate, and the public has been invited to attend. There il no charge. As scheduled, the events and listed participants will be as follows: English Pleasure Class Mrs. E. A. Murphy, Paul Washke, Miss Judy Babb, Miss Sally Bangs, Mrs. W. H. Chapman, Miss Joan Fisher, Mrs. Walter E. Block, Miss Gene ' Ingram, Frank Moreland, Mrs. Jo Wise, 'flssFaye "Thompson:"' Western Pleasure Class Mill Judy Babb, Mrs. Huntington Clayton, Miss Sylvia Peckham, Mrs. Harry Hawn, Earl Steeple, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Davis, Mrs. Denning Tye, Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Scroggs, Roy Wilcox, C. A. Dick inson, Mrs. Alfred Martin, Mrs. Ernest McCulloch, Ralph Tay lor, Miss Adeline Williams, Mrs. Claude Potter, William Berg, Mrs. Joe Wise, Miss Sally Bangs, Miss Janice Billings, and Sanford Nemerousky. Tennessee Walking Horse Cy Slocum, Lyle Scroggs, Glen Hite, Carol Snethins, Mrs. W. E. Block, Mrs. Huntington Clayton, LeRoy McKay. Five-Gaited Class C. A. Huntington and others. Junior Hands and Seat Har ry Chapman, Tony Chapman, Gary Warren, Marlene . Martin, Miss Judy Babb, Miss Dolores Tye, Miss Joan Fisher. Driving Class Dr. Merle Howard, Paul Blachley,. Russ Terry, Glen Hite, Everett Mil ler, and Paul Washke. .. Thrco-Gaited Class Glen Mile, Miss Georgia Dale, Miss Judy Babb. Musical Chairs Miss Janice Billings, Frank Russell,. Miss Sally Bangs, Tony Chapman, Miss Sylvia - Peckham, Harry Chapman. Western Pairs Miss Janice Billings, Frank Russell, Rolland Angst, Donald Parks, Mrs. W. . H. Chapman, Miss Faye Thomp son, Frank Moreland, E. B. Murphy. All events will be open to post entries, it is announced. Nurse is Bride In Simple Rite; Will Be Student Miss Katherine Marie Egger, rlaughtcr of Mr. and Mrs. John Egger of Chcmelah, Wash., and Robert Eugene Hamill, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Hamill of Merced, Calif., were married In St. Mary's Catholic Church Sat urday afternoon, November 11, at one-thirty o'clock. The Very Rev. Francis P. Leipzig offici ated. Miss Egger wore a fine Mil lateen suit in mink shade. Her accessories were toned from the deep brown of alligator shoes and bag, to banana shades in Victorian bonnet and gloves. She wore an orchid cortege, and carried a prayerbook and ros ary. For "something borrowed" she had an heirloom lace hand kerchief, which had been car ried at her own wedding by Mrs. Philip Baird, the bride'i attendant. The latter wore tailored suit of taupe shade with wine-colored accessories and . a corsage of yellow roses. Larry Eggers of Spokane act ed as best man. Frank Hamill, a brother of the bridegroom and James Shaeffer were usherf. Mr. Eggers escorted his daugh ter to the altar. Music was provided by Ls- (CONT1NUED ON PAGE 3-B) M XM-X I 1- ..',. if. J MaaefNivjeeeeHHeeaRffawrtLij ' WilUhlre photo end engraving TAKING NIGHT SHIFT In the east, or surgical wing, of Sacred Heart Hospital are the above erew: from left, Mrs. Maxine Heffron, Mlsa Alma Russell, Mrs. Doris Bellnnl (whose cap denotes that aha trained at Henry Ford Hospital In Detroit) and Mrs. Doris Jeans, They are in a dress ing room, grouped about a hot-pack apparatus for preparation of polio packs, . MRS. MORRIS SPEAKER FOR MONDAY BOOK CLUB Monday Book Club will meet at '.the home of Mrs. Harry Titus, 214 Thirteenth Avenue East, Monday afternoon at one o'clock. Mrs- Victor P. Morris will pre sent the program. WL ite Xeiueleen UUorn Lj i2nla While velveteen formed the wedding guwn of Miss Beverly Knapn, flnughlcr of Mr. and Mis, Alburl Knapp of Srnlngfleld, at her marriage November 7 to Thnmna Ray Edwards. The ceremony was read at four o'clock in the afternoon by the Rev, Lcluwl Nelson, pastor of the Church of the Brethren. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Payne of bprlngficld. The gown was made with full, TT: s A i , J-, t- tV t Pwf V '-' i ' f f i' ' . ' r '$ : ' 1 ' - 4" m ih , Kennell-Ellla Fhnto. WilUhlre Entevln RECENT VISITOR at the J. A. Plummer home was Mrs. Charles Owen (Charlotte Plummer), and little daughter Susan Louise, ten month. sweeping skirt and train below a fitted bodice which had long sleeves. A round net yoke was Inset above a rolling bertha col lar which gave an off-shoulder effect, and tiny covered buttons trimmed the bodice front. Site wore a small cross of mother-of-pearl, a family heirloom, and carried a bridal bouquet of car nations with central grouping of gardenias. Her fingertip veil was of French illusion veiling, und it was held by a crown of the velveteen, embroidered with seed pearls. She was given in marriage by her father. The bride's one attendant was Miss Kathleen Harris of Spring field, her step-sistcr. She woro a gown of dark red velveteen, similar to her sister's dress, and- worn iviln matching .mitts, a braided hnlo headdress and shoulder veil embroidered in gold. She carried golden-hucd chrysanthemums. Richard Barker was best man, and ushers were Rex McCrcady and Edgar Daniels. Candles were lishtcd by Mrs. Stanley Itodakowski and Mrs. Ronald Wctacll. The bride's mother clmse a gown of steel gray satin, worn with a corsage of red roses and shattered carnations. Cinnamon crepe was worn by the bride groom's mother, and her cor sage was yellow roses and shat tered carnations. Before the ceremony, Mrs. Donald M. Warnick, aunt of the bride, sang "I Love Thee" (Grieg) and "Yours Is My Heart Alone." Andrew Flanders was the organist. A reception in tha recreation room of the church followed the (CONTINUED ON PAGE 2-B)