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About Eugene register-guard. (Eugene, Or.) 1930-1983 | View Entire Issue (March 21, 1962)
4 T ' ' EUGENE REGISTER-GUARD. Wed., March 21, 1962 Page 11A Y-Teen Conference Scheduled Saturday Foreign foods served Oriental style and panel discussions by foreign students will be two of the highlights of the Y-Teen Area Mid-Winter Conference for MRS. H. HARLEY MULL Heads District Archdiocesan Council Tells New Officers Mrs. Harvey Kreiger of Port land was elected president of Archdiocesan Council of Catho lic Women at the 38th annual meeting Sunday and Monday in Eugene. More than 200 affili ated groups of Catholic women in western Oregon were repre sented. Mrs. Michael Burke of Eugene is retiring president . ' Mrs. Lloyd Keck of Junction City was elected auditor and Mrs. Bernard Bachand of Salem was named recording secretary. Mrs. H. Harley Mull of Eugene was named president of the Eu gene district (deanery) and be comes a vice president of -the Council. Mrs. Robert Monson of Sweet Home is retiring presi dent of the Eugene district. A constitutional revision rec ommended by the Council lim iting to 20 the number of affili ates from any one district (dean ery) failed to pass. The term "district" was adopted to re place deanery. Post to Mark 43rd Birthday Willamette Women's Post, American Legion, will mark the 43rd birthday of the organiza tion at a meeting Friday at 8 p.m. in Veterans Memorial Bldg. Special guests will be mem bers of the post s auxiliary, the Willeymen, who will be in charge of entertainment for the evening. Karl Wagner, presiding officer for the past year, and his committee will conduct ini tiation and installation for the Willeymen. Funds collected during the evening will be used for the post to send delegates to Boys State and for other community service projects. Miss Betty Sether will be in charge of refreshments. Groups Visit Vets Hospital Willamette Council of Dis trict 3. American Legion and Auxiliary, will sponsor the an nual Willamette Trek to Veter ans Administration Hospital, Roseburg, Sunday (March 25). at 1:30 p.m. The posts and their auxiliaries will provide the program and refreshments. Local talent representing Unit 3 will be group novelty and popular dances by Sharon Kirk, Nancy Stuart and Carolyn Nejderberger. Barbara John son will dance Hawaiian num bers. Unit 3 members not attend ing may take cookies to Veter ans Memorial .Bldg. either Fri day or Saturday, or to the home of Mrs. Jack L. Sherman, 1855 Franklin Blvd. bey) : I Hiding your I r Polish and Tylr clean with Vk f Copper) ' W Copper Glo cleans your copper as It polishes to a high luster. No hard nibbing. Gentle. Try Copper Glo! Corvallis, Springfield, Pleasant Hill, Salem, Silverton and Eu gene. Sessions will be held Sat urday at Central Lane YM-YWCA. Theme for the conference is Do Unto Others." The main speaker for the,morning session will be Miss Bonnie Maines of the Seattle YWCA. Through slides and stories Miss Maines will relate her many experi ences in the YWCA exchange program with South America. Foreign students from the University of Oregon will com pare youth in their countries to youth in America. Participating will be Miss Karin Zollikofer, Rio de Janiero, Brazil: Yon Broekohoff, Maarssen, Holland; Etsuo Kurimoto, Tokyo, Japan. international entertainment will be performed during the luncheon. Students from Pleas ant Hill High School will par ticipate in a bamboo dance; Mrs. Carol Mclntyre will do a Hawai ian dance and Miss Becky Ruff will sing, accompanied by Miss Janet Calhoun. Special guests of the clubs will be high school exchange students from the re spective cities. Local Y-Teens assisting in the arrangements for the annual conference are: Miss Rhonda Johannis, Nancy Esteb, Cheryl Haskell, Karen Robberson, Janet Calhoun, Sanra Norre- gaard, Carol Jensen and Judy Grankey. Cal Young Junior Y Teens and Y "Junior Leaders" will assist with the serving. Miss Eleanor Borden, YM- YWCA staff, is conference chairman and hostesses will be Y-Teen advisors and members of Y-Teen committee. 'Sports Night' Dated by PTA Colin Kelly PTA will sponsor a "Sports Night" featuring sev enth grade students Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the school gym nasium. All parents and stu dents are invited to attend the fund-raising event which also will feature a food sale in tiie cafeteria during intermission. Students will give demonstra tions of exercises, dancing, re lays, tumbling, mass games and other activities, supervised by the physical education teachers, Miss Shirley White, Mrs. Jack Schendel, Boyd Morgan and Harold Duncan. Leo C. McGee is chairman. A similar program featuring eighth and ninth grade students will be presented March 28. Council Lists Noon Speaker John G. Foster, Jr., member of the Chamber of Commerce special committee on city beau tification, will speak to Eugene Council on Women's Organiza tions Monday at a noon lunch eon meeting in Osburn Hotel. John Wilson, chairman for the Lane County Cancer Society Crusade, will tell of the April Crusade. Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars Auxiliary will be in charge of hospitality and dec orations. Any women's organization is invited to send a representative to the meeting. Reservations will be taken by Mrs. Frank Bloomer, DI 4-2128, until Fri day evening. HOSIERY DEPT. main floor rxf I J r r- Plaid T-ji interlining of lightweight apparel JgglSer foam provides comfort within wide range of temperatures, yet adds little bulk to wool and orlon blend coat. I Hintc FYnrn HpIokp 1 Dear Heloise: I learned that I could remove ink stains from my fingers by using a well-known cuticle remover. I tried this on leather and it worked too! Perhaps this is the answer to people who have ink stains on their leather couches, etc. Mrs. A.G.C. Dear Readers: This woman enclosed a sample of leather with marks of ink on it. I tried the cuticle remover ... by golly ... it worked! Tell me why! I called a cosmetologist and told her. She said they used it when they spilled color tint (wasn't I nice to use that word instead of dye?) on people's clothes. It will remove the hair tint from white linen and colored linen. I tried it! Heloise Dear Heloise: When making meat balls . water before rolling the balls. Dear Heloise: The only answer to cutting down on your grocery bill is to watch the ads in the paper. Take advantage of the lower prices and . . . shop around in two or three stores each week. Careful Shopper And . . . ladies, nearly every letter on this subject that came into this column said to watch the grocery ads! Surely these people who save know. Heloise Dear Heloise: Your tip on using a heel of bread on top of cabbage when cooking to eliminate odors was terrific. I now use that for broccoli and brussel sprouts too. Did you know taking soda will remove any grease spot from carpeting? I could not keep house without it. Simply brush a generous amount over the spot and lightly through the pile of the rug. Leave the soda overnight and vacuum it off the next day. It is darned near magic! This works on old grease spots as well. I had one spot that was a year old (where my son had gotten sick) and it removed that too. J. M. Copyright, 1962, by Heloise Cruse Distributed by King Features Synndicate SEAMLESS STRETCH The liveliest stocking that you can find anywhere. You'll love how they actually move with you never confining, always flexible yet smooth with never a sign of ugly wrinkling or sagging always lovely on your legi well wearing too and the height of style. There's no such thing as a "spring" coat any more.v This rakish, low belted plaid offers three-season vers atility and is also water repellent. Its i . . always dip your fingers in This will prevent stickiness. Reader Pair 3 P's- 5.85 The Best Place To Shop..t Alter Alt' Its Another Shirley Kay .Curtis, on her way to watch a ball game at Harrisburg Union High School, picked up the school phone Tuesday afternoon, to discover she had won second place in the 1962 Betty Crocker Home- maker of Tomorrow for Oregon contest. She receives a $500 scholarship. 'Eeeeeeeee," she squealed into the receiver, and then add ed: "I hope you're not pulling my leg." The Register-Guard, checking a routine release from General Mills, had called the high school Bethel to Fete State Officer Miss Joy Henderson, Grand Bethel Representative to Min nesota, will be honored at a re ception Sunday at 3 p.m. by Bethel 26 of Job's Daughters. The reception will be in Mc- Kenzie River Masonic Temple, 850 E. 14th Ave. Miss Henderson is also Junior Fast Honored Queen of Bethel 26. She recently was chosen as Sweetheart of the Eugene Chapter of DeMolay. Friends of Miss Henderson and others in terested are invited to attend. Miss Dana Maycumber, Hon ored Queen of Bethel 26, will be hostess for the reception. Assisting her are Miss Barbara Himsworth, hospitality; Miss Ann Leighton, sociability; Miss Sharon Hassman, decorations; Miss Nancy Hale and Miss Mari lyn Spriggs, cleanup. Miss Connie Neal will be voc al soloist during the reception and Miss Darlene Thorpe will play the piano. Mrs. Earl Chap man is Bethel Guardian and Robert Wagner is Associate Guardian. it!!!i fc Guaranteed Repairs Large GARRETT 8TOCKSTAD A. C. STOCKSTAD BACKED BY W 29 YEARS H DELIBERATELY FEMININE A fashion first for Spring, '62 . . . 100 wosnob'e rayon "Palenta" sheotn. The drop shoulder is decorated with a novelty pin and two slash pockets set in on slirt. Colors: Navy, Toait, Tile Blue 12.95 Sizes: 10 to 18 READY TO WEAR Win for Shirley Kay for the name of Shirley Kay's parents. They were not aware that Shirley Kay herself had answered the telephone. Top winner for Oregon is Karney Ellen Piatt of Beaver ton High School who receives a $1500 scholarship and be comes a candidate for the na tional title and total scholar ship of $5000. Shirley Kay will add her new est win to a $500 savings bond awarded her as winner of the 1961 Linn County Veterans Day essay contest. This assures her the oppor tunity to attend the college of her choice. Willamette Univer sity, next year. She plans to major in psychology and minor in economics. An honor stu dent, she's active in a wide va riety of school functions, makes many of her own clothes and likes to try out new recipes. The Harrisburg miss was one Course to Offer Meeting 'Musts' Central Lane YM-YWCA is offering a community service course in parliamentary proce dure on Monday nights at 7:30 p.m. Mrs. LeRoy Daniels, inter national past president of Toast- mistress Club is the instructor. The course is for both begin ners and for those who wish to brush up. It will highlight "musts" in knowing what to do in meetings and how to con duct them. Further information on the five-week class may be obtained by calling DI 4-6251. STYLE-ART Ptrmimenti ' from 4.95 up Shampoo and set from 1.00 up Call DI 31701 261 C 6th Opao 8 am - 8 pro On All Appliance! or Small Expert TV-HI-FI or Radio Repair ir Large Stock of Parti if Fast, Efficient Service SERVICE PHONE DI 3-5034 BRING IN YOUR TABLE APPLIANCES FOR EXPERT REPAIR SINCE 1933 APPLIANCES SERVICE SHOP: Medical Center BuUdlnf 13 E. BROADWAY A new Concept in fit for the Average American Figure second floor BEAUTY I W thotitr o th vahflint! H't shorttr o fht htmlintl try H oh you'll war It Aorni vmtim9,ovm montyno clhraf'totnl of a total of 406,132 girls in 12, 874 schools participating in this year's contest. ' In the eight years since the program start- ed, more than 2Vj million girls have enrolled and scholarship awards have totaled more than three quarters of a million dol lars. Oh yes the answer to our original telephone question: Shirley Kay's the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Curtis of Harrisburg. Th Tmtily Studio Kln..l OUm ..3B I WSDOINO I PHOTOOn-ArBY : tve MANUFACTURE WHAT WE SELL The Savings Are Passed On to You! We Not Only Meet Competition WE MAKE COMPETITION SLEEPAIRE 39 tilt 10th At. nl 1-2748 See it At The first two-way mi here. You'll be amazed by the figure con trol of this famous foundation fabric . . . enchanted by its original Jantzen print. Magicurve, with tures French bra Powernet to hold 10-18, $19.95. just wear a smile jF?ftMHBsi . iT"TT Something New Has Been Added . . . Cole of California v Swim Wear An entire collection of fascinating custom-for-you swim suits are waiting to allure you. Quality SporUwrar for women and mtaiea 187 E. BROADWAY Klttr-earn'r trora Cifna Hotl MOSAIC TILE Exciting new hobby See big selection at . . . McDaniel Lumbar Co. i4 BlT M. 01 I-S3W IHK aE'" SF( )IRTS SH?)W I I March 2930 31 2 BIG SHOWS 4i) COMBINED A FOR THE FIRST TIME Admission 50 C Families SI Fairgrounds Eugene Register-Guard Want Ada Bring Fast Results stretch Powernet is low V-backline fea cups now framed in them firmly in place, and aantlCIl Open Friday nights till 8 for your convenience '