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About Herald and news. (Klamath Falls, Or.) 1942-current | View Entire Issue (Jan. 15, 1954)
S-M PAGES 1 TO 41, Horses, Too,Have fiefs' Theme of Hunt Club BaJ ws FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN iRTLANDi OREGON. MONDAY. FEBRUARY 15, 1954 hnN THREE ' '- '''' ' . y hrylhurst Alumnae View Jring Styles at Luncheon BV JANE ALLEN Fuhlui Editor, The Oreionlui of the first big fashion luncheons of spring was held rday in the Multnomah hotel Rose Bowl room when Maryl i .inmnae and friends gathered to view a gay, fast-moving nrosentea oy uiwiau . . .... LL. Ti ,..UU. Ji Hntly commentaiea ny uiuimiia new uimui uueuiur inm on and nis assisiam duwma pUaUC i .ij,jB pretty new clothes actually led off with the costume Mrs. baux was wearing suhismi. hui wc wvh ui jcumaijs moiselie magazine. Handmaeher, it combined a gray, flaring Pellon-lined wool ,iih brief little shaped collarless bolero lined in orange L,h hlnnse. And little hat accessorizing it was in' "orange L" one of spring's accent colors. was but one of the nanasome Jianomacner suits ana cos , inninHpd suits and costumes designed by topflight U. S. Ur Jane Derby and ones perfectly attuned to the show's ."the well-spent aoiiar. LemWes Diaw Accent cent on the Important costume theme continued in dress jacket ensembles, with suits and dresses ensembled to. and with costume-iike dresses for street wear. Us with jacket ensembles included a cocoa-colored, full fed siik dress witn tiny little bolero giving spring's smooth- iffed, Empire-iiKe snnoueue. HtS and dreSSeS enStHIlUIUU lu uuma "luuucu a iinnuauiiic suit in SIIK ana worsiea, genuy imeu nu suiiiy uuwuu ckline. ensembled to straight black coat in the silk-and- ked fabric. ,d costume-like wool dresses for street wear Included iS's princess silhouette in a gray wool, accented with spar- white pique. issic suits also came in for attention in navies, grays and canrl in both the shorter-jacketed, softly fitted silhou- and those with straighter jackets. le gay print story of spring was also told many ways I in s violet-strewn silk lining and blouse of a Swansdown ((costume; in softly detailed little dresses, some ensembled loleros or to coals; ana in poiKa oots oi au sizes anu fs in many taorios, some aone in soil sninwuisi siyies, some in dresses ensemDiea xo wool coais file Women Remembered nden Petite designs for women who stand 5 feet 5 or un- ere also shown once in a Jigntweignt wool tutea sun in modeled by Bess. 'Robbins. i Wnvprlv shop was also well represented in the show filing dresses such as a little shantung beige full-skirted less frock, Empire-midriffed and sparked with white trim. Id sportswear from Caliente included designs for vacation for late spring into summer a iuu paie Diue, peuon-imeu, n skirt teamed to candy-stripea cotton sleeveless mouse and another princess-silhouetted textured pique witn outlined in red gingham. ' . . . r late day and evening, short lengths predominated in laces laid over silk and in silk prints, such as a pink and fe polka dot with open neckline, three-quarter sleeves. Ussorv hiehliriits of the show included handbags in prints !e in polka dots), small hats worn forward on the head, i in alabaster calf, and nosegays of flowers worn on- cos wle was an airy, tremendous-skirted tulle wedding gown, : high neck ana Drier putiea sleeves. - BUDGET SG oats or A 1 resses . II (Plain. Only) jf kitted ui(I sscd 17 STACEY STORES ALL CASH AND CARRY CHECK THE ADDRESSES BELOW FOR STORE NEAREST YOU W K. E Alberto 04 12S4 ' Mi N. E. Sandy Bl.d.-.TR 0757 SHS N. E. FrescoH ""'I- WE 1311 "II N. E. Union Ave. uJ"ff Fremont Til 26S5 WSN. E. 30lh Ave. "or niiiinqsworth TR 1M "i'S. E. Hoivlhorno S.I."USdAta rt of Lodd Clrel..EA 70M SnA li W" Rl 7A 5S; , . . Hol9",, Mv. K ol Holqatt Farm SU 3643 WEST PORTLAND 1301 I. W. Morrison BR 9838 7872 5. W. Capitol Hwy., Multnomah CH 2548 8435 S. W. Terwllllqer Burllnaame Shop. Ctr.-CH 9047 S260 S. W. Scholli Ftrry Rd. IRa lelgh Hill Shop. Ctr.) CY 2-9023 NORTH PORTLAND 914 N. KlllllKJIworth.TW 9139 Brdwy. at William) Avo.-TR 2464 9019 N. Jen.y, St. Johm UN 1467 VANCOUVER, WASH. 1400 Main SI. OX 5-5051 BK- FREDA MOWREV Club Editor. The oreioclaa -r For Portland business women and their guests, one of the im portant tjvents of the 'spring is always the annual dinner spon sored by the ensemble group of business women's clubs. 1 he dinner this vear is sched uled for Wednesday, March 10, at 7 p. m. in the Multnomah hote.' ballroom with the Fifty Fifty club as hostess: Other Tasks Assigned Because it was .the Women's Advertising club which first conceived the idea of this an nual get-together of the busi ness women's groups, its presi dent serves each year as gen eral chairman. , Miss Grace Cawthon is filling that assign ment for the 1954 dinner. Assignments for the other clubs included in the ensemble group follow: Business and Pro fessional Womens club, menu; Zonta club, . speaker; Escowe Associntud Hunt clubs of Oregon gathered Saturday night for their annual bull at Portland Meadows. J. C. Herlng (left) is talking over hunting with Mrs. Zula Currln, Whip for Columbia Hunt. Harry Zell, owner of famed harness horse, Johnny Harvester, talks with Mrs. Zell and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Nlcol of Portland Hunt. Mr. and Mrs. Junies Mao Gregor (right) count tickets for the dance. Mrs. Mao Oregor of Oswego Hunt was chairman of affair. Large cut-outs of romantically Inclined horses decorated walls and carried out Valentines day theme. iiWT".r Dinner Slated for'March 10 German Lad Will Speak Dieter Werner, exchange stu dent from Germany,, will speak at the dinner meeting . Monday at 6 p. m. of the Young Career Girls club: of the YWCA. His subject will be "I Escaped From East Germany." . Werner, who Is living with Dr. and Mrs. Warren Hale, is here on a one-year' scholarship and was brought over under the auspices of the American Field -Service; "In 195V he -escaped from Silesia (East Ger many) and fled to .the western zone .where he went to a high school in a -small- town near Hannover. When he returns to Germany, he intends to finish high school, attend the univer sity and become a teacher and educator. This meeting of the Young Career Girls club is open to any girl between 17 and 23. Reservations may be made at the YWCA before 10 a. m. Monday. - ,' Breakfast club, entertainment; Altrusa club and Insurance Women's association, seating; Realtyettes and Credit Wom en's Breakfast club, publicity; Women's Traffic and Transpor tation club, program; Rotana club, reservations; Quota club and credit women's group of the Portland Association of Credit Men, decorations; Rose City Professional and Business Women's club, amplifying equip ment Fourteen clubs now are ln- iuded in the ensemble group, as it is called. To be eligible for membership, a club must have been organized for five years or more and must have a member ship of at least 30 women. LaVATTA TO SPEAK George LaVatta, director of information for the Portland area office of the bureau of Indian affairs, will be speaker at the men's night meeting of Trinity '(Lutheran Parent Teacher, organization Wednes day at 8 p. m. The men will take entire charge of the meeting and Ervin Schweiger as chair man of the "kitchen" committee. MOTHERS PLAN PARTY The St. ' Ignatius parochial school Mothers' club will have a spring luncheon and card par ty Wednesday in the school hall, S. E. 43d avenue and Pow ell boulevard. There will be a fashion show, during the lunch eon. Mrs. John Petros and Mrs. James Dignan are in charge of the affair.- ' HOSTESS . .HOUSE . A CALENDAR- TELEVISION PARTY Hostess House Party, an audi ence participation show, is tele vised each Friday from the studios of KOIN-TV, S. W. 2d and Columbia. The audience must be seated by 9:30 a. m.; the show is televised from 10 to 10:30 a. m. Admission tickets are available at The Oregonian Hostess House, 1320 S. W. Broadway. -v Four Clubwomen of U. S. Visiting Brazil To Check On Reported CoHee Shortage Four U. S. clubwomen mem bers of the General Federation of Worrten's Clubs have insti tuted an investigation of the coffee situation. The group left New York February 11 for Bra zil, where the women will study the problems affecting high re tail coffee prices and shortages. in the group are Mrs. Theo dore S. Chapman, Jerseyville, Illi, first vice president of the General Federation of Women's Clubs : Mrs. Zaio , woodf ord Schroeder, Grosse Point, Mich., international affairs chairman; Mrs. Gilbert F. Loebs, Water ville, Me., consumer chairman, and Mrs. Carl E. Swanbeck, Huron, O., American Home chairman. The women are making the trip at the invitation of the Bra zilian Coffee institute (an ad junct of the Brazilian govern- Lodge Seats ; New Officers James Eggiman was installed chief ranger of Oregon court, Independent Order of Fores ters, Saturday night at. Wash ington Masonic temple. ' Some 500 persons witnessed the ceremony, according to Vir gil E. Bohlke, past high chief ranger. ... . v Other officers include the past chief raneers. Kenneth J. urien and Jack Christensen: court Ueputyr-Robect-Andrews;.. finan cial secretary, Mrs. Martna j. Waldo; recording secretary, Mrs. Maud Andrews; treasurer, Mrs. Bethel M. Haiman; vice chief ranger, Wilson Siltman; orator, Clair Franck; senior woodwara, Ford C Waldo; Junior woud ward, Aarne Kupari; senior beadle, Claude Gordon; junior beadle, Cecil Piland, and trus tee, Edward Davis. The order, an international family fraternal organization, had its Portland beginnings in 1880. ment) and will spend 10 days seeKing miormation on cottee crop, damage; cultivation and harvesting methods'; labor situ ations affecting the cultivation and export of coffee; transpor tation facilities; port facilities; experimentation and other pro grams related to production im provement; storage methods and facilities. In preparation for the trip, Auxiliary Chief ' To Visit District Over the Top auxiliary to the Veterans of Foreign Wars will be hostess when district No. 1 of the auxiliary's Oregon depart ment meets Tuesday at 8 p. m. at the. VFW post hall, 2240 N. W.. Flanders street Mrs. Eugene Hafer, Portland, will make her official visit to the district at this meeting, accord ing to Mrs. Anthony Endrizzi, district president. Presidents of the units in cluded in the district will review accomplishments .of their year to date. The. meeting Is open to aux iliary members. . . Forerunner Group J UU CLEANERS j DYERS m Portland's Original Furniture Store Offering Early American Fnrnitnre ' Evcliisivelv! Come In and see our complete "open stock" selections of maple din ing furniture in all price ranges. Remember . . . always shop Miller's for your Maple Home Furnishings. FRFFI UZY SUSN WITH ANY ' "fab: 5-PC. MAPLE DINETTE SET t MaiI 0rde's Invited, Shipped Prepaid 58,11 0reen Stamps Convenient Terms We have reduced all of the floor sample stock of our FORERUNNER group , . , this is your opportunity to purchase Jjeautiful, modular American walnut bedroom, Jiving room and dining room furniture at greatly reduced prices . . . , some pieces in eastern maple ... limited stocks. Reg. Now A. Six-drawer chest 139.50 11. Three-drawer chest ... 89.50 69.95 Five-drawer chest ....129.50 99.95 ' Ni'ght stand.. - 54.50 39.95 B. Cane headboard 49.50 29.95 Two-drawer low chest - 59.50 39.95 C. Storage headboard 89.50 4995 D. Five-drawer chest .129.50 99.95 Eight-drawir chest 169.50 139.95 E. Extension din. table 99.50 49.95 Dining chairs 19.95 17.95 F. Buffet . 129.50 99.50 Buffet Deck . 89.50 49.95 . j G. Drop-leaf extension ' dining table 99.50 79.95 Dining Chairs ........ 24.50 17.95 K. Glass top end table 54.50 36.95 Step end table 69.50 49.50 t I. Coffee table 69.50 49.50 o In Beaverton Cypress 2-2621 Open tvtry tvenlng 'til t:00 P. M. . . . Saturdays 'HI t:00 P.M. GIGANTIC VACUUM CLEANER SALE at VACUUM CLEANER Specialists 18N.W.4th NEW REBUILT & FLOOR SAMPLES HERE arebuta FEW; 3KIRBYS..$18S0 6 HOOVERS $9 95 3Electrolux...$14'5 1LEWYT..$39'5 3 ONLY BRAND NEW GE.oNUT$29.95 3 .ONLY TANKS NEW Westinghouse$39.95 CALL BR 2724 or AT 2997 NOW! Free Home Trial 3r ih iftL I l?l '&Jt& ft MANY GREAT BUYS! the group has . -en studying im partial reports on coffee con sumption, coffee trade and cof fee marketing. Mrs. Chapman, spokesman for the group, said: "It is our ear nest desire to prepare an objec tive and comprehensive report of our findings for the home makers we represent. Our or ganization fools an obligation to seek clarification of the cof fee situation, because we are in terested in keeping consumer prices down, in stimulating trade and in promoting amicable relations with our Latin Ameri can neighbors. We hope to be able to make recommendations that will aid In bringing about lower retail coffee prices in the United, States." NEW LEADER NAMED Mrs. Dorothy Anderson, bank secretary, has been elected to the presidency of the Oregon Trail chapter National Secret taries association, to fill the un expired term of the . late Mrs, Beatrice M. Porter. Mrs. Por ter was fatally injured in an auto accident earlier this month. Mrs. Anderson is employed at the main branch of the United States National bank.. . School Plans Shrove Fete Mrs. Joseph Herron, president' of' St. . Thomas More School Mothers' club, lias appointed Mrs, Donald A. Dwyer as chair man of the Mardi Gras cele. bration to be held in the school gymnasium March 2 at 11:30 a. m. . ' This Shrove Tuesday fete will he a gala affair for the chil dren of the school and for the sub-school set of friends and neighbors who are invited , to attend. Hot dogs, cakes, pop and candy will be the bill o fare; There also will be a cake walk, treasure chest, , fish pond and post office. ' New this year will be a doll's wardrobe booth, supervised by Mrs. M. A. Ivey. For the third consecutive year Mrs. John Tuhy will have the cupcake and doughnut booth; Mrs. W. G. Ballantyne will have the' hats, leis and peh nants, and Mrs. John Casey the treasure chest. Mrs. Bernard Harpole is in charge of decora tions. . - . . QUALITY FURS . . even (fifed Mnskrut Buck . . . even dfcd Karakul Lninb . . ecen efici! Sheared Raccoon pints tfnx A WEEK Afttr Small Down Foyntnt Hard to believe that such HASN$2 super quality is yours at such a price! Only be cause Allen Waugh, San Francisco wholesaler, quit business and sold ' such furs to Ed (Hamilton at far, far less than wholesale, are such values possible. Shop early from this amazing selection: Forest Brown Dyed Northern Muikrat Back Cape Dyed Brown, Grey or Honey Brown Squirrel Underbelly Coits Honey or Dark Brown Dyed Chinese Karakul Lamb Coals Haluril Wild Mink Gill Coat Dyed Black Persian Lamb Coat Natural Ranch Mink Clutch Cap Bleached and Dyed Sheared Honey Beige Raccoon Flank Coats Dyed Deep Brown Sheared Raccoon Coats Midnight Black Dyed , African Kid Coats Deep Brown Dyed Russian Squirrel Back Sling Cape ALL FURS LABELED TO SHOW COUNTRY OF ORIGIN RESTYLE SPECIAL Transform your old fur coat into fash-, JjjIO A AA ion's newest 1954 Cape. Off season OIF) W If special .............. Fr Mit fvn ul Ijnmilton 908 S. W. Morrison BE 514V