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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 28, 1938)
IfEDFOTlD MAIL TRIBUNE. fE'D'FO'RD. OKEflOX, TUESDAY. JUNE 28. 19. PAGE THREE Society By Clara N iedermeyer-Maust Wedding Service Held on Sunday At i beautiful outdoor ceremony lut Sunday afternoon at the home of her parenta, Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Nledermeyer. Miss Erma Louise Nte- dermeyer was united In marriage to Mr. Ray Maust, of Portland, son of Mr. and Mra. O. C. Maust of central Point. The rites were solemnized at 4. o'clock under the large trees border ing the lawn and before a back ground of flower bedecked evergreens. The service was read by the Rev. W. H. Eaton, former pastor of the local Baptist church. The bridal pro 1 cession started from the front door of the residence and, to the strains of Lohengrin wedding march played by Mrs. Mabel Sims, continued up the aisle formed by the guests seated on the lawn, to the bower of flowers where the couple spoke their vows. The bride was lovely In a white silk net dress with silk lace Insertions. She wore a flnger-tlp veil flowing from a white halo crown and carried a shower bouquet of talisman roses and lilies of the valley. The bride's cousin, Miss Leona Con ger, was her bridesmaid. She more a dress or tea-rose tulle and carried a bouquet of yellow rosebuds. Mr. Lewis Conger, also a cousin of the bride, acted as best man for Mr. Maust. Mrs. Chester Wendt, the bride's aunt, sang "Mavis" and "O "Promise Me." Following the ceremony, a recep tion was held at the Nledermeyer home for the SO guests attending the wedding. The bride and groom cut .their respective wedding cakes ana refreshments were served on the lawn. The Misses Joan and Maxine Ouyer assisted In serving. Out-of-town guests attending the service Included Mr. and Mrs. Holmes Gabbert of Portland, Mlsa Doris Con ger and Mr. William Caldwell, both of Corvallls, The bride, an only daughter of the Nledermeyers. Is a graduate of the Medford High school class of 1933 where she was an honor student and selected aa the outstanding girl of the class. She later attended Oregon State college in Corvallls. The bridegroom, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Maust, graduated from Phoenix High school, after which he attended University of California. At present he Is associated with Master Engravers at Portland, where the couple will make their home. Mr. and Mrs. Maust departed Sun day evening for a wedding trip to the Oregon beaches. Mrs. Stanton Is Honored At Dinner Party Mrs. Edwin Stanton of Los Ange les, house guest of Mr. and Mrs. Oaln Robinson here, continues to be the Inspiration for many en joyable entertainments. mum vitrtr was feted at a num ber of events last week, among them delightful dinner party gi Mr. and Mrs. Weldon P. Blddle at i . VHHnv vnlnff. cnci uw " rollowlng dinner, guests played bridge for the remainder oi m Blng. Those present were the honoree, Mrs. Stanton. Mr. and Mrs. Oaln Robinson, Mrs. Lillian Salade, Mr. E. W. Carlton. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bard well, Mrs. Corbln Edgell. Mr. snd Mrs. Earl Tumy, Mrs. J. J. Emmens. Mr. H. H. Prlngle and Mr. and Mrs. George M. Roberts. VFW District Meet Here Friday Eve A district meeting of the auxiliary of the Veterans of Foreign Wars of ( District No. 8 with Crater Lake auxiliary of Medford acting as hos tesses will be held Friday evening. July 1. at the Medford armory at 8 o'clock. Julie Canfleld. council member number 8. will preside at thla ses sion at which delegates from Grants Pass. Klamath Falls and Ashland will be In attendance. At this time the membership prize for the last three months for the auxiliaries in this district will' be awarded. Also a candidate will be chosen as council member for thla district for the following two years whose election wlU be ratified at the de partment convention, to be held In Salem July 9 to 13. Following the business meeting, a social hour will be enjoyed and re freshments served. Christian Church Croup To Turner A group of, Medford residents left f today by motorcar for Turner, Ore gon, where they will attend the annual etate convention of Chris tian churches until July 3. Thcwe attending from the local First Christian church are: The Rev. James M. Hamilton, pastor, Mrs. Brt Gregory. Mrs. Minnie Crisp. Mrs. Rlchsrd Klemn. Mrs. Lois Young. Mr- and Mra. Horace Mitchell, and Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Sawyer. Auxiliary Has Sewing Party Crater Lake auxiliary. Veterans of Foreign Wars, held a covered dish luncheon Tuesday at the home of Mrs. O. E. Hukill on Rogue River, near Trail. This session was In the form of sewing party. Members accom plished a great deal of work on the auxiliary banner and quilt. Swedish Massage Hel man Baths MODER ITE CHARGES Ashland Phone 144 and Clubs Mary Davis Evelyn Critseh Weds Mr. Reavis In Monday Rites Miss Evelyn Joan Qrltsch. daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Prank M. Qrltsch of this city, became the bride of Mr. Morris Reavis, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Reavis of Portland. Mon day morning In a 10 o'clock ceremony at the Sacred Heart Catholic parish on south Oakdale avenue. Father p. W. Black united the couple In marriage. The bride wore a suit of light blue with matching accessories and a cor sage of gardenias and bovardla. Miss Mildred Qrltsch. sister of the bride, waa her only attendant. She wore a blue suit and corsage of talisman rosebuds. The bride's brother, prank Grltsch Jr., acted as best man for the bride groom. Following the ceremony, a recep tion .was held at the home of the bride's parenta on South Ivy street. Forty guests were present. The rooms were attractive with decorations of pink gladlola and blue delphinium. The refreshments table was beauti fully appointed In all-white decora tions, Mrs. Reavis received her education at Holy Names In Spokane, Wash., and later graduated in nursing from St. Vincents in Portland. Mr. Reavis attended University of Oregon in Eugene and at present is In the brokerage business In Portland, where the couple will make their home following a wedding trip to San Francisco and Los Angeles. Mrs. Clay Here For Vacation Mrs. Charles Clay. Jr., arrived in Medford this morning by train and will spend several weeks visiting her parents. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Miller at their home on East Main street. Mr. and Mrs. Clay motored from their home In Brauley, Calif., to Stockton, where they were week-end guests of Mr. Clay's brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pollock. Mr. Clay then returned to Brauley. Mrs. Clay will be welcomed to Medford by her many friends here. Miss Jenkins Back In Klamath Falls Miss Mary Jane Jenkins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Jenkins of Klamath Falls, recently returned to her home in that city after spending the past two years studying in Oer many and France. This la Miss Jenkins' first visit home since going abroad. The first year of her absence Miss Jenkins spent at Heidelberg, Ger many, where she was a student at the university, and during the past winter she had a teacher's fellowship at a girls' college In Orleans, France. Mr. and Mrs. Jenkins and daugh ter are well known in Medford and are frequent visitors here. General Aid To Meet Friday The homecoming of General Aid of the First Methodist ' Episcopal church will be held Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock In the church parlors. Guest speaker at the session will be the president of Pro-America. Mrs. C. M. Kurd. Her topic will e "Women's Political Responsibilities," the subject Is non-partisan. All members of the aid are asked to be present and visitors are al ways welcome to attend. The session was previously an nounced for Tuesday. Juvenile Club To Convene Juvenile degree of honor club will convene Saturday morning at 10:45 o'clock in the Townsend hall over the Baldwin piano shoppe. Circle Convenes This Evening. The Circle will hold their execu tive meeting this evening at the home of Dorothy and Irwin Doty on Howard avenue at ft nvlivk an officers, group leaders and their as- niobniivD are aeicea 10 attend to se lect groups for the coming year. Calendar Tuesday 8:00 p. m. DAV auxiliary, armory. 8:00 p. m. The Circle, home Irwin Doty, Howard street. t P.T.A. Activities Circulators of petitions requiring annual state payments for public schools of sum added to the com mon SChOOl fllnrl InMm ts.tll, . least eio.00 per resident child of scnooi age, are reminded to send In petitions, even though nnt nlete .With mmn. tA th wm.v clerk's office for verification or to ftirs. james oey. Petitions must be nfttirluw mA signed on both sheets If names are on ootn sneets. SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE Coats - Dresses - Hats ETHEL WYN B HOFFMANN Chan & Chan I'hlnese Medicine Co. lie relieved at once by our herbal remedy. Dt too have: Asthma, .y I Hay rever. stomach as-aial rrouble. Constinatinn Chronic Couth. Rheumatism, Bin-is Trouble. Piles. Arthritis. Co litis, Enema. Appendicitis, High Dlood Pressure, Prostate. Heart, Liter, Bladder, Kidney, Lungs Blood, Irlnsrr troubles. Herb. Ill give yon relief. 10 a. m. to p. m. Tuesdav-Thoradav 10-11 a m. Cfcwed Sunday, m E. Main AFTER SUFFERING LONG ILL HEALTH Alice KnotU. wife of Rev. Joseph Knott, pastor of the First Metho dist church, passed away Monday afternoon in the parsonage home 37 North Orange street, after six months' illness. Funeral services wilt be held Wedneaday, at 3:30 p. m.. In the First Methodist church. Dr. 8. W. Hall of Salem officiating and Rev L. F. Belknap and Dr. T. H. Templo assisting. Interment will be In Sis kiyou Memorial Park with the Con ger Funeral Parlors In charge. Alios Ross was born on a farm near Essex, Iowa, June 36, 1876. Later her parenta moved to Carson. Iowa. When she was about sixteen years of age the family moved to Des Moines, Iowa, where she finished public school and attended the Highland Park Normal college. Her father was a muslo teacher and she early showed traits of musical ability. She graduated from the Des Moines College of Music and taught piano for a number of years. She was organist of the High land Park Methodist church for about twelve years. On February 38. 1007, she was married to Joseph Knotts. In Sep tember of that year Mr. and Mrs. Knotts came to Oregon, Mr. Knotts entering the ministry of the Metho dist church. For 31 years Mrs. Knotts has labored faithfully with her hus band, serving at Lafayette. Junction City, Marshfleld, Grants Pass, Cot tage Grove, Roseburg, The Dalles and Medford. Mra. Knotta was converted when just a school girl and haa lived a faithful, earnest and aggressive Chris tian life, active, as health would permit In the Sunday school, choir, ladles' aid and other church organi sations. She was sealous In the work of the missionary societies and an ardent supporter of the W.C.T.TJ. After several years of poor health, she became 111 with the flu Decem ber 31, last. A few days later she developed angina pectoris which was the cause of her death. She la sur vived by her husband and by one son. Rev. Ross Knotta of Odell, Ore gon. TRAIN 10 OPERATE E The morning northbound Southern Pacific train will operate on a new schedule beginning next Tuesday. Under the new schedule there will be no change in train time on Sun days. Mondays, holidays snd days following holidays. On other daya the train will arrive about an hour later than at present. Its scheduled departure time now la 9:33 a.m. The train terminates its run in Orants Pass. First class mall, dally newspapers and special delivery and special handling parcels are trucked from Grants Pass to Eugene where connection is msde with the Cas csde trains. Malls at the central postofflce here close one hour before train departure time. TO BE IN ASHLAND Funeral services will be held Thurs day at 2 p. m. at the Dodge chapel In Ashland for Mrs. Frank T. Homes, who paseed away Saturday In Great Falls, Mont. Mra. Homes, the former Edna Burns, wss a native of south ern Oregon. She married Mr. Home: In Medford in 1926, the couple mov ing to Granta Pass the same year She Is survived by her husband and a son, Bernard, and her pa. ents, Mr. and Mra. W. R. Burns, of Rogue River, also a brother and sis ter. Mr. Homes' psrents, Mr. and Mra. Charles I. Homes, reside In Ashland. Rev. H. S. Wanamaker of the Ash land Congregational church, will con duct the services and Interment will be In the Mountvlew cemetery nt Ashland. f- The Medford Iron and Steel Works, 1185 North Central avenue, which was sold by Joseph F. Olath several weeks sgo to the Csrl F. Oerllnger interests, hss been purchased from the Utter by Ben and William Dlerks of Wlsner. Neb., the new owners snnounced today. Purchase price was not revealed. The Dlerks brothers, who formerly owned a similar plant In Wlsner, have been In Medford for the past two weeks, setting up machinery and Films Developed Free PRINTS 4 ALL SIZES Southern Oregon's finest film finishing service at Medford's low est prices, Twlce-e-dav Delivery Mall C rour Films SWEM'S Eastmsn Kodaks and Finishing HERE'S NUMBER 5 IN THE MAIL TRIBUNE'S GUESS WHO CONTEST JLA NO. S Can You Identify the Prominent Medford Man Whose Picture Appears Above? THIS Is one of 35 pictures selected from the Mall Tribune's photo engraving file for use In this newspaper's "Guess Who" contest, which started June 23. A different picture will be published each Issue for 35 daya. Each will depict some well known Medford resident. A number will appear under each picture. To enter your guess, merely write down the number of the pictures as they appear and opposite the number, the name of the person you believe represented. At the end of the contest send In your guesses, plainly written, together with your own name and address. $8 will be given for the most accurate liat $5 for second best and $2 for third best. The contest is open to all. It costs nothing to enter. Start with picture No. 1 in the June 23 issue and UESS WHO! equipment they brought from Neb. raaka. Both are expert machinists and plan to continue In the special ization of all kinds of heavy mill and mining repair and maintenance work. For aroma.,, for taste . . . for mildness CopTtitta 199s, Uocitt Ac Mnu Toatcoo Co p I Mr. and Mrs. William Dlerks and their two and one-half year old son. Paul, are making their home at 208 West Jackson boulevard. Ben Dlerks Is also living there. PAOLWH1TBMAN M" gfleK y Paul Douglas Vwr J-gg(",J Joan Edwards XvU .'LW ll THB MODERNAIRES VJI JZf II Bnry FrUay Nlfkl &A Jl 104 C. i. Statim kZrtf'1 j UTTIE GIRL INJURED WHEN HIT BY T, ON NO. CENTRAL AVE. Betty Lou Parker, eight-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Parker, 1025 Court street, waa reported rest. Ing comfortably at her home this alternoon. after suffering bruises about the body and a head Injury when atruck this mornlne bv a truck driven by George R. MeClung of 837 ; North Central avenue. The little girl apparently escaped a skull fracture, according to the attending physician, and sustained no DroR-en oones. MeClung. employed by Snlder's Dairy and Produce company, was arrested by city police on a charge of reckless driving and cited to sp. pear In city court Wednesday at 10 a. m. The accident happened on North Central avenue In front of the Pierce Auto Freight Lines company office. MeClung was quoted by city police as saying that he waa driving north on North Central avenue at about 25 miles an hour when he saw three children, about 75 feet ahead of him, start across the street, from the east to the west side. Two of the children stopped and started back, MeClung told police, and he braked his truck and swung to the left side of the street to avoid hitting them. Betty Lou, however, continued across the street, police explained. The Parker girl was struck by the right front fender of the truck and carried for some distance, after which she fell off and landed against the curb on the west side of the street, city police said their Investigation disclosed. One wheel of the truck Jumped the curb, the police ssld, and the vehicle crashed head-on Into an elm tree near the street. The entire front end of the truck was caved In. police said, with the radiator wrapped completely around the tree. LAST RITES FOR OWNEY J. PATTON Last rites were held this morning at 9:00 o'clock. In the Sacred Heart Catholic church, the Rev. rather Francla W. Black officiating, for Owen J. Patton, 70. well-known locel resident, who passed away last Fri day after a brief Ulnejs. Father Black, In a aermon, paid tribute to the devoutness and sim plicity of the long time resident 1 of thla city. esterfields Interment waa id Jacksonville cem etery. There were many floral offer Inea. The eourthmu flap v.. ered to halt mast in honor of the former circuit court bailiff, Mr. Patton waa a resident of Med ford for more than 30 years. At one time he waa manager of the Nash hotel, now the Allen hntAl. Mm wmm employed by the Mall Tribune for 10 years In the circulation depart ment. ANGLER FINED FOR LACK OF LICENSE Charles W. Nutter of Medford. charged with angling without a li cense, was fined tS5 and coats in Justice court yesterday, on a plea of guilty. Nutter was fishing in a friough near the Gold Ray dam on Rogue river. Jake D. Walch and Arnold F. Young, charged with disorderly con duct, appeared, Walch entered a plea of guilty and Young a plea of not guilty. Passing of sentence waa de ferred until after Young's hearing, which will probably be tomorrow. The two ara alleged to have engaged In a fight at a south Pactfto high way resort. Curtis Lee Byrd of Dorrls, Cat., charged with failure to stop at the intersection of the old Pacific high rr-i Schilling 11 111 dessert- ice cream Vs i For added flavor use Schil ling Spices, They are rich in fragrant, spicy goodness. They cost no more so why not enjoy the best! ... just a wisp of Chesterfield's aroma tells you right away there's a real cigarette. That's because Chesterfields are blended with skill from aro matic Turkish and mild, ripe home-grown tobaccos. Light one and at once you'll know that Chesterfields are milder and taste better give millions of MORE PLEASURE than any way and the Midway road, waa u seauC ! and cost. John M. Plaar of Klamath Palis, charged with operating an auto with license platea other than the plates assigned U, waa fined a and costs. Closing time for Too Lata to Clas airy Ada t 1:30 p m. WEDNESDAY AT SAFEWAY Lean shoulder PORK STEAK 17HC POUND Schilling Vanilla gives you fine, dependable fla vor! Delicious in any -and especially good in home-made ice cream. Schilling Vanilla never freezes out nor bakes out. Next time you make try it I 0 0 smokers other, cigarette