Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983, April 21, 1955, Image 7

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ANNotations . . . .
"b. Apn7 26, 1564"
. By ANN COXNELL
' (Register-Guard photo, Wiltshire enff.)
MAD HATTERS Winners of the spring bonnet contest, feature of a recent luncheon
at the Oakway Women's Golf Club, were (left to right): Mrs. Delbert Falkner, 3rd,
whose hat was a golf course in miniature; Mrs. Melvin Whipple, 1st, with an elaborate
umbrella creation; and Mrs. Kenneth Pappenhausen, 2nd, who used golf mitts and
plastic golf balls to form her headgear.
'April in Paris'
Chosen as Theme
"April in Paris" will be the
theme for the Saturday program
of Poetry and Drama Section of
Eugene Women's City Club. The
meeting will be at 2 p.m. in the
Woman's Club, 450 E. 14th Ave.
Mrs. E. E. DeCou will, give a
resume of her observations of
April spent in Paris. She also will
speak of the French author, Ana-
tole France.
. Mrs. E. F. Judkins will give the
century French poetry and songs
in an account of the early
French troubadours and will read
from some of their earliest writ
ten lyrics. She also will discuss
the writer, Emile Zola.
Mrs. Charles Harkins and Mrs.
Harry Lichty will be hostesses.
Mrs. Karen Lund
Has 91st Birthday
JUNCTION CITY Mrs. Karen
Lund celebrated her 91st birth
day April 15, at the home of
Mrs. Harry Hcrmanscn who held
open house in her honor. Mrs.
Lund makes her home with her
daughter, Mrs. Jorgen Nielsen,
but is visiting in Denmark.
Mrs. Lund was born in Den
mark and came to Junction City
more than 30 years ago. Many
old-time friends called during
the afternoon and evening and
' it was noted the Danish lang
uage was much in evidence as
they gathered around the coffee
table.
AROUND THE TOWN
DANE BO CIRCLE EIGHT
Square Dance Club will have its
annual hardtimes party Saturday
at 8 p.m. at Clear Lake School.
Carroll Harlow will be in charge
of arrangements. All members
are asked to come in costume.
LADIES AUXILIARY and Can
ton Hovey No. 4 will meet Friday
at 8 p.m. at the IOOF Hall. Fol
lowing the business meeting re
freshments will be served by a
committee composed of Mrs.
Henry Long, Mrs. Frank Mccum,
and Mrs. Milton Ashley.
MERIDIAN CHAPTER of Order
of Eastern Star will have a stated
meeting Friday at 8 p.m. in the
Masonic Temple, 10th and Olive
Sts. Mrs. Joe Bert Miller will be
chairman of the refreshment com
mittee and Mrs. Floyd Wittcn will
head the entertainment commit
tee. SONJA LODGE, Sons of Nor
way, will have its monthly potluck
dinner Saturday at 6:30 p.m. in
Sens of Norway Hall, 1836 Alder
St. A program will follow. Mem
bers are asked to note the change
in date from the regular Friday
dinner.
DAUGHTERS OF SONJA
LODGE, Sons of Norway, will
have a demonstration of lefse and
flat bread baking Friday at 7 p.m.
in Sons of Norway Hall, 1836 Al
der St. Mrs. Signe Andersen will
Laurel Hill PTA
Plans Fun Night
Laurel Hill School PTA will
sponsor a Fun Night Friday at
the school, beginning at 7 p.m.
Hot dogs, cake, pie and coffee
will be sold. There will be a
bazaar and numerous games.
At the April PTA meeting the
following officers were elected:
Loyd Bransford, president; Mrs.
W. S. Laughlin, vice president;
Roger Anderson, treasurer; Mrs.
Charles Courtney, secretary.
OPEN
FRIDAYS
UNTIL 9 P.M.
WILLAMETTE AT TENTH
Save
Now!
Clearance
49 Dresses
Reduced To $1 7
Only 1
49 Dresses from regular stocks A splendid
collection for wear right now and into Summer.
Formerly to $29.95 . . . Now at a saving that
makes it worth your while to shop at once , , ,
We are expecting you.
9 Dresses in All Sizes
Dresses in Many Styles
Dresses in New Colors
$1
17
ea.
and
Onl
MEDLEY'S'
teach' the flat bread baking and
Mrs. Theo Hanson and Mrs. Lena
Tjon, the lefse baking.
LADIES OF THE ORIENT will
have a business meeting Saturday
at 8 p.m. in the home of Hal H.
Miller, 388 E. 14th Ave.
Girl Scouts Plan
Camp Program
A camping-interest progtam
open to all Girl Scouts will be
held Thursday, 7:30 p.m., at Nich
olas Garden Community Church,
21st and D Sts., Springfield, under
the direction of Troop 215.
Following presentation of col
ors and community singing, the
Three River Choral group, di
rected by Mrs. Gene Bowers, will
present a program of choral read
ing and song. Girls from five
Scout troops and one Brownie
group will participate.
Slides on camping will be
shown by senior service Scouts
from Eugene High School. The
group is led by Mrs. R. L. Follett.
Group singing will be directed
by Carol Maxwell.. The public is
invited to attend.
EUGENE SHAKESPEARE Club celebrated the 391st birth
day of the Bard of Avon at its April meeting, which was Monday
in the home of Mrs. Carl Washburne, and we were privileged to
be a guest. "Meat" of the program was a scries of scenes from
"Macbeth," play presently studied, each mem
ber choosing her preferred scene. Sometimes
several women combined efforts, presenting a
variety of characters. Many of the readers dis
closed marked dramatic talent, as might be ex
pected from a group which has given close
study to the dramatic works over a considerable
period of years.
As members arrived on the rainy afternoon,
they were greeted by a large sunny mass of
acacia in a hallway. The color was repeated
in mantel bonquets of forsythia; and again in
the table centerpiece of yellow primrose, flat
in a shallow tray with three fat yellow candles,
and flanked by Venetian glass statuary figures
in yellow-gray. ,,
Sympathy was extended to a member. Miss
Celeste Campbell, who appeared with her right arm in a cast,
due to a broken wrist Luckily, she is ambidextrous. Other mem
bers, Mrs. Henry Tromp and Mrs. O. F. Stafford, were missed
because of illness. ' Mrs. Tromp's prepared speech of welcome,
made up of appropriate quotations from Shakespeare's works,
was read.
A DRIVE ALONG the McKcnzie Highway at this season is a
delight to the trillium lover, and a sidetrip into the woods will
show these fast-becoming-rare flowers blooming in groups. We
make it a rule never to pick them, unless it is one flower from a
group of three or more; seldom then, because the bulb dies when
the flower is pulled. Someday we hope to have time and oppor
tunity to dig one of the deep-placed bulbs to naturalize in our
own garden, against the day when we may not be able to go
afield to see them. . . .
SPEAKING OF FLOWERS, the bulbs in the garden of the
Walker Clinic were a pageant of color at Easter, and still are
flowering, although the rain has battered them. There are scarlet
tulips, a flaming background for white, rose and blue hyacinths;
in other beds, daffodils and paler narcissus blooms, some grape
hyacinth. Forget-me-nots are opening blue eyes in promise, too.
WHEN SUZAN FAY COLDIRON was born March 21 to Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Coldiron of Springfield, she became another link
in a long chain of statistics coupled by the magic date, 21. In
addition to the fact that she was the 21st grandchild (on her
mother's side) of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Parker of Goshen, Ind.,
the family notes these significant dates: Oct 21, 1868, birth of
great grandfather, Daniel M. Parker; Jan. 21, 1893, death of
Daniel M. Parker; Nov. 21, 1911, birth of Suzan's father; Dec. 21,
1919, birth of Suzan's mother; Aug. 21, 1938, marriage of Suzan's
parents; June 21, 1939, birth of Suzan's brother, George Aaron.
Two uncles of the baby were married April 21 and May 21,
1939, and a cousin, Bonna Jean Parker, was born April 21, 1942,
MR. AND MRS. Mortimer A. Heinrich of Honolulu announce
the birth of their third son and fourth child, John Thomas, on
Friday, April 8. ' They are University of Oregon graduates and
former residents of Eugene where Mrs. Heinrich grew up as
Elizabeth tBetty) Onthank. Summer before last they visited ex
tensively with her parents and friends in Eugene when Mr. Hein
rich was on a three months' leave from the Bank of Hawaii.
HONOR HAS COME to a Lubbock, Texas, woman artist, who
is known to many locally through her visits in this area. She is
Mrs. Chester A. (Bess) Hubbard, a cousin of Mrs. C. D. (Hal)
Jeske. Her sculpture, "La Reboza," the head of a Taos Indian
woman done in limestone, has been chosen as one of 30 pieces of
sculpture to be exhibited this month by the Women's Interna
tional Art Club of England.
Mrs. Hubbard works in media of oil and lithographing, as well
as sculpture, and has had exhibits in many galleries.
Washes and Dries in One
Complete Automatic Operation
Lte2.
mm
Whiter & Brighter
Cleaner of Surface and
Imbedded Soils
More consistently clean,
item after item,
wash after wash.
Atomic Evidence and Scientific Evidence Prove
that the Bendix Duomatic Washes 3 Ways
Cleaner. r
Conclusive tests of leading automatic washers
have been made by a leading independent testr
ing laboratory authorized by the Atomic En
ergy Commission to use radio active materials
for scientific research.
Among the leading washers tested, Bendix
Duomatic RATED FIRST ON ALL THREE
COUNTS.
Each and Every Friday
AN
ALL NYLON
WHITE
WOMAN'S SHORT COAT
Reg. $29.95 Value
You Gals should take advantage of this offer. Nothing to
buy. Just come in and register. You can win a 100 nylon
coat .... easily laundered in a Bendix Duomatic.
Drawing tomorrow
evening.
Now Three Storei to Serve You Better
Eugene
Springfield
Junction City
820 Charnelton
329 Main
Hiwoy of 9fh
Ph. 5-8528
Ph. 6-2529
Ph. 8-2636
Reglster-GuarJ ,ene, Ore.Tliur., Apr. 21, 1955 7A
S-T-R-I-T-C-H NYIONS
tirade hoi thai adjust lo $29
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rt rill r-A tv, -
pr. I
1 9 w R.Vfr 'ii,i A
960 WILLAMETTE
? F? R PI P Evl FP P f
1 , t "
IT
1 V
mm
Ud uk Q ....
the wee heel wears confection colors!
The pretty way to walk now through summer in ribboned
underlines of pink or white leather rising high to en
circle the ankle. Yours in sizes 3'A to 10, AAA thru B.
MAIL ORDERS: Add 25 Additional Pott Oflic charges on C.0.CU
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sheers
Everybody loves 'em, SfM Wg '
everybody wants 'em . . . Sears l "wJkJt fc'Vli
has Dacrons at a truly terrific f
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sparkling, suds
loving dacron
woes with these
Small Straws
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Sophisticated little straws
smart, go-with-everything
lily white, in adjustable
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A. nine, black or brown print
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H'.J to U',i,
C. Pink and blut, lilac and
aqua, chartreuie and citron,
coral and yellow on white
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10th & Charnelton
Phone 5-1561
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