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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1941)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD. OREGON, MONDAY, DECEMBER 15, 1941. PAGE THREB Society by Betty Shoemaker Ha Lockard, Virgel Clark Wedding Held Butte Falls, Dec. 13. Spl. Misi Il Maxine Lockard, dau ghter of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Lock ard of Butte Falls became the bride of Virgel L. Clark, also of Butte Falls Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock. The service was read by the Rev. D. Millard at his home at Shady Cove in the presence of Intimate friends of the couple. Preceding the ceremony Rev. Millard played a violin solo, "Neopolitan Nights" accompan ied at the piano by Mrs. Mil lard. The bride wore an afternoon dress of soldier blue with a cor sage of bouvardia and gardenias. She was attended by Mrs Cecil Rodgers and Miss Jean Page. Mrs. Rodgers wore blue and Miss Page a wine outfit. Both wore shoulder corsages. Cecil Rodgers was best man. Mrs. Clark attended school at Barnes City, Iowa, and grad uated from Butte Falls high school in 1936. Mr. Clark is al so a graduate of Butte Falls high school and attended Ore gon State college at Corvallis. - Immediately following the ceremony the couple left for a short wedding trip and upon their return will take up resi dence at Butte Falls where Mr. Clark is employed by the Med eo Corporation. Professional Woman Plan Christmas Party Business and Professional Wo men will hold a Christmas par ty at the Girls' Community club house Thursday at 7:45 p.m. Those attending are isked to bring a 15 cent gift to exchange and also 15 cents for the Christ mas basket. Miss June Erickson Is chairman for the evening's entertainment. wives And EMERGENCIES Have Their GOOD Points The best-intentioned husband is a bit vague about what bis wife does around the house. He tskes good deal for granted . . . just as he does when he drives into a Standard Station and says "Fill her up." Then . . . boom! ... along comes a crisis. He dons the apron. It's make those beds. ..bathe that baby . . . phone that grocer . . . Junior, stop biting Sister I It's sweep those floors... wash those dishes ... Ye gods, that doorbell again! It's din ... din , . . din. "You're a better man than I am," says Friend Hus band as he learns the tough way to appteciate the Little Woman. Yes, sir, a crisis can give validity to those wotds "You don't know what it means to be a mother." And a crisis IS making the public sense what it means to be an oil company. With Uncle Sam saying "Tank ers, please," "Gasoline, please," the people begin to see be hind that taken-for-granted oil-PumP- , They see the well-rigs built of steel and sweat ... the tank ships in heavy seas . . . the pipe lines broiling across a desert ... the men who integrate a thousand activities into one op eration. For us the bright spot of the emergency is this: Folks are commencing to recognize us for what we are... a working member of the nation's family. THURSDAY, 8-9 P.M. 70th WEEKLY STANDARD SYMPHONY iarra Menraux. Conducting Mutual-Don lee Network Jljitlia ,M Ludmilli: Ovtrtwt Ctats Sympiony D MiMri Pint Movement frtmck Pomp and CircumtaBca.........S7far Adagio tor Stnnira Ltttn Through tha Looaiag-Glaaa iSeltctionst Tataa Tha Sorcarat't Aaaraatica.. .....uaaa Standard Oil Company of California and Clubs Christmas Music Program To Be At High School Residents of Medford and vi cinity are reminded of the pro gram of Christmas music to be j given tonight at 7:45 o'clock at I the high school auditorium. The i appearance of the Southern Ore-1 gon College of Education musi cians is sponsored by the Med ford Musical society. The public is invited without charge to attend this evening of well-arranged music. Several groups of vocalists will take part. Miss Louise Woodruff supervises the program with Duaine Monroe as narrator. Guests Visit At Prentice Home Mr. and .Mrs. Anthony Galla Rini and son, Ronnie and Syd ney B. Dawson of New York City were guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Prentice on Newtown street Sunday, en route to Eugene where Mr. Gal la Rini will give an accordion concert tonight. He appeared in concert here twice this year and Just completed an engagement in San Francisco, having been in concert tour from New York City. A performance is also sched uled in Klamath Falls Tuesday evening. Mrs. Prentice has re ceived an invitation to attend the banquet in honor of the accordionist preceding the con cert. The banquet is being given by Mr. and Mrs. Emil Buzaid of Klamath Falls. Several cars of accordion students of Mrs. Prentice will meet this evening at her home to arrange trans portation to Klamath Falls to hear Galla Rini. Christmas Party Will Be Tonight Plans are completed for the Jackson County Recreational club Christmas party to be held tonight at 6:30 o clock in the county court house auditorium. Mrs. Olive Floyd, menu chair man, asks all members who have not made early reservations to bring a covered dish. Mrs- A. E. Brockwuy. pro gram chairman, has arranged for exchange of gifts at the close of the dinner program. Mrs. Lee Port is In charge of decorations with Mrs. Ethel Bish, clean-up chairman. The Gold Hill branch of the club will hold their Christ mas party Tuesday in Gold Hill. Kiwanian Dames Will Sell Seals Mrs. Charles Barnes heads a group of Kiwanian Dames who will be In charge of the sale of anti-tuberculosis seals at the three city booths tomorrow As sisting Mrs. Barnes will be Mrs. C. M. Hurd, Mrs. Olin Arnspiger. Mrs. O. J. Halboth, Mrs Carl Tengwald, Mrs. Walter Hoppe. Mrs. Mel Starnes. Mrs. George Goodrich. Mrs. C. H. Paske, Mrs. W. J. Warner, Mrs. C. H. An drews and Mrs. E. E. Koefued. 4) Square Dancers Revive Old Forms Griffin Creek Square Dancers enjoyed a party at the grange hall recently for members and invited guests. Besides square dancing a number of old-time dances were revived. Musicians for the evening were Eva Pren tice and her Accordionettes with old-time music; Jake Brown on the harmonica and Winnie Brown accompanist and Sarah Tolle who played as a specialty number "Waltz Quadrille." Public Card Party Advanced One Week Oet-Together club members are holding their public card party this week at Eagles hall on Wednesday rather than De cember 24 in order not to con flict with Christmas activities. Dessert luncheon will be served at 1 p. m. Hostesses will be Mrs. Pearl Gay, chairman; Mrs. Doris Gunn, Mrs. Ann Schwartz and Mrs. Esther Kruggel. Rotary Women To Meet At Gilstrap Home Mrs. Ernest R. Gilstrap will be hostess to Women of Rotary at her home, 35 Geneva street, Wednesday with salad luncheon at 1 p. m. Hostesses are Mrs. Charles W. Lemery, Mrs. Allan F. Perry and Mrs. Mark A. Goldy. Rotary women are asked to bring a gift for exchange at the Christmas tree and fruit for the Christmas basket. AT BEDFORD'S NEW ICE ARENA Popular Prices Skates for Rent Beta Sigma Phi Meeting Announced Mrs. Robert Thomson will entertain members of Beta Sig ma Phi sorority at her home, 105 Crater Lake avenue Tues day at 7:30 p. m. Those attend ing are requested to bring a gift for the Christmas tree and contributions for the Christmas basket. Womtn'i Relief Corps Plans Party, Meeting Women's Relief Corp will hold a Christmas program and meeting at the home of Mrs. Clissie Balrd, 34 North Peach street Thursday at 2 p.m. P.-T. A. Activities Jackson Rev. Louis Kirby, pastor of the First Methodist church, told the Christmas story at the meet ing of Jackson school P.-T. A. Friday afternoon at the school house. He discussed cooperation of the school and church. Christmas carols were sung by students of Mrs. Ruth Bolton and Mrs. Nina Carlon. During the business session an inven tory was taken of available cots and bedding in the Jackson school district. In case of emer gency this equipment will be made available for use in that section of the city. Discussion of precautions to take during air raid was also brought before P.-T. A. members. Tea was served at the close of the meet ing to 35. CALENDAR Monday 7:30 p. m Junior Guild, home Miss Betty Vilm, 203 Gen esee street. 7:30 p. m. Rebekah lodge, I.O.O.F. hall. ; Tuesday 1:30 p. m. DeMolay Mothers club. Masonic temple. 1:30 p. m. Lady Elks, Elks temple. 1:30 p. m. Mistletoe club, home Mrs. Michael Beck, Old Stage road. 2:00 p. m. Missionary society First Presbyterian church, home Mrs. R. S. Daniels, 407 Park St. 2:30 p. m. Women's auxiliary of St Mark's church, home Mrs. Margaret Fabrick, 108 Crater Lake avenue. 6:15 p. m. Mary and Martha circle, First Methodist church sunshine parlors. 6:30 p. m. Crater Lake post 1833, Veterans of Foreign Wara and auxiliary, armory. 7:30 p. m. Jolly Stitcher club, home Mrs. Ida Hollars, 432 Plum street. 7:30 p. m. Chapter BE, PEO, home Mrs. Blanche Canode, 1716 Crown avenue. 8:00 p. m. Eagles auxiliary, public card party, Eagles hall, 42 North Front street. The Grange Griffin Creek Grange Members of the Home Eco nomics club at Griffin Creek held a Christmas party at the home of Mrs. Jessie Minear Thursday afternoon. Dessert luncheon was served at 1 p. m., followed by visiting. The rooms were decorated with Christmas greenery. Guests were Mrs. Mabel Todd, Mrs. Gertrude Mo Culloch and Miss Josephine Arnold. Club members made plans for a Christmas covered dish din ner to be held tomorrow at 6:30 p. m. Grange members are in vited. DIES IN FIRE Grants Pass, Dec. 15. (AP) Charles Buman, about 72, re tired farmer who lived alone, died in a fire at his home at Wilderville Saturday night. He was believed to have fallen while carrying a kerosene lamp. ADRIENNE'S Christmas Gift Surprise Sale Tuesday Only HAND BAGS to $5.00 values Tuesday Surprise St9B ADRIENNE'S Lend-Lease Total to America's Allies Now $1,202,000,000, Word Washington, Dec. 15. (P President Roosevelt reported to day that lend-lease aid to Amer ica' allies 33 countries listed as eligible had totalled $1,202,- 000. 000 through November 30. Actual exports to December 1. however, were worth only $595,000,000, he said. The third report submitted to congress on lend-lease activities said aid extended amounted to only $18,000,000 in March but the effort had been speeded to the extent that S283.000.000 worth of material was made available In November. Congress has voted nearly $13 000 000,000 for lend-lease. Mr. Roosevelt said in a letter to congress that the weapons from the arsenal of the democ racies must be used where they can be employed most effective ly and "that meuns we must let Britain. Russia. China and other nations Including those of this hemisphere, use the weap ons from that arsenal so that they can put them to most effec tive use." Hawaiian Residents "Good and Mad" Now San Francisco, Dec. 15. MP) Residents of the Hawaiian islands "are good and mad" and their morale is high, passengers arriving on a clipper said, and blackouts on the islands "are very black." The clipper with 26 persons aboard arrived here yesterday. Except for Pan American air line employes, the passengers were the first to leave Honolulu by air since the Japanese attack a week ago yesterday. The arrivals were not permit ted to talk directly to reporters. SEA BEACONS RELIGHTED Seattle, Dec. 15. (AP) The coast guard announced today that all lighthouses and light ships in the Washington and Oregon area have been relighted. They were extinguished after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor a week ago yesterday. On Mall TrlDuu want ado. MnWi& 7Jr I America's favorite JjlyZ' If f cigarette is sore to 5 s& , vyjj V'V The gay gift I ril 4 ' k C. package below contain J i f', ??S?lr f OmdwsytossyVvV i w 'J'" 1 Ur "Merry ChriioW C 1 VL-s. XV. ' 'A I ai. It S tha "moos Camel i L ' r'-1'- " afaal' JJiiJ cartoo(10pckiof20'i). Vi I Ai T, " " Vn I IV "awful moking plea- M v. A plsmokSTwIU. V J Jfey a (ft) J.srSSS) V Cr-f rr n V(' V VV J 1 Tobacco. Hvaw I I CAMELS A yf There's an added pleasure In giving Camels at Christmas. Yon QpLkniv your gift will be so genuinely welcome. More smokers pre fer Camels than any other cigarette. And that preference holds for men In the Army, the Navy, the Marines, and the Coast Guard, too! So remember those lads In uniform ...remember all the cigarette smoker on your list ... with the cigarette of costlier tobacco CmhuU. Choice of the two holiday package above. 1 var r a i..' .al-jiv V- 1 J I al rJ ilir.iFf .WINS 4-H HOME PRIZE CREATING mors natural beauty In ho ma eurroundtnga hai brought a covated reward to Alice Roberta, 15. of Turner. She haa been named Oregon'a 1941 winner In tha national 4-H home grounds beautlflcatlon conteat conduotod by tha axtenalon aervlce, for which aha will receive a 17-Jewel gold watch given by Mra. Charlea R. Walgreen. Chicago horticultural en thualaat. Alice cleared her yard of debrla, planted allpa and aeeda In flower beds, aa well ae ahruba and ferna In appropriate placet, made and painted window boxes, aet out amall treee, white washed fence and fruit treee, and kept tha lawn mowed. She will compete for tha Waatern eee tlonal award of a trip to tha 20th National 4-H Club Congreaa to be held In Chicago Nov. 28-Dec 6. Railroad Workers Sign Settlement Chicago, Dec. 15. (AP) Chairman Wayne L. Morse of the emergency mediation board an nounced today that representa tives of 14 unions of non-operating railroad employes and the carrier managements signed an agreement to carry out provis ions of a mediation settlement negotiated by the board in Wash ington December 1. This was the last agreement, he said, needed to assure "be yond question" that the railroad wage disputes which had threat ened a national strike have been settled. CLslnt Urn. fuc Claaalflad Ada S a. m. Too Let to CUaalty 13:30 p Caa UMi raouM want a da. a. li rjii.i j l r a i . ' - ltl - J Nl1 J I t'J I J Oregon Commonwealth Elects CIO Officials President, Secretary Portland, Dec. 15. (AP) Douglas Anderson, Portland, was elected president of the Oregon Commonwealth Federation yes terday, succeeding S. Stephenson Smith, former University of Ore gon professor who had headed the organization since its start. Anderson, a national vice-president of the CIO Textile Workers union, was unopposed. Ralph Peoples, CIO state sec retary, was elected executive di rector; Wendell Barnett, Brooks, first vice-president; Frank Gor don. Portland, second vice-president; Roy Hewitt, Salem, third vice-president. HONOR ROLL The following pupils of Roose velt school were on the honor roll for the second six xweeks period: IB Ann Denman, John Obye, Kathryn McAllister, Margbt La geson. 2B Marilyn Payne, Patricia Lydiard, Shirley Edison. Caro lyn Pierce, Neil Richardson, Justin Smith. 2A Joan DeZell, Elizabeth Collins. 3B Lorraine Kendall, Cor rinne Wing. 3 A Susan Drummond. 4B Maxwell Peirce, Teddy Rubenstin, James Collins. 4A Sidney Smith. 5B Jimmie Moore, Marilyn Anders, Mariam Currans, Ann Gentle, Cynthia Jackson, Pa tricia Sether, Beverly Young, Lovelle Davies, Nancy Lageson. 5A Rose-Marie Heitkamp. 6B Joan Coleman, Mary Sue Greene, Marianne Hutchison, Phyllis Merrick, Mary Virginia Wait, Margaret Green. OA Allene Owen. AMERICAN-BORN JAPS IN RUSH FOR PAPERS Portland, Dec 15. (AP) Hundreds of American-born Jap anese who must identify them selves almost daily as United States citizens, applied at the Humidor jar. ar w 3 GSaHiTSli (ililtJfiU' TlK1 Multnomah county courthouse today for Identification papers. The rush began yesterday, and officials estimated that nearly 900 of the 1000 American-born Japanese in this vicinity had ap plied. WALKER KILLED Corvallis. Ore.. Dec. 15. (AP) An automobile fatally injured S. F. Carpenter, 65, a pedes trian, two miles north of here on the highway to Albany Sat urday night. SEATTLE RAID SIREN AUDIBLE SEVEN MILES Seattle, Dec. 15. (AP First of 10 three-horsepower air raid sirens, audible seven miles, was en route here from a St. Paul factory today and the city an nounced it had ordered 22 small er sirens for installation and syn chronization throughout the city. Officials said experts had deter mined the large number were necessary because of Seattle's hilly terrain. Cost was estimated at $10,000. to make an appointment for a GROUP PHOTOGRAPH of the FAMILY while all the family it together for the holiday Mason It will be a picture that ho will cherish with real pride PRINCE ALBERT Jf If be smoke a pipe, a big, long-lasting pound of cool-burning Prince Albert spells smoking pleasure "way into the New Year a., at camp, on ship, at home. Prince Albert l choice tobacco, "no bite" treated for mildness and "crimp cut." It' the National Joy Smoke. There' no other tobacco like It. Your local dealer haa two handsome Prince Albert "specials". . . the pound tin (bix) or the special glass Get your today. E NEW AIR COURSE Southern Oregon College of Education, Ashland, Dec. IS. (Spl.) The Southern Oregon College of Education la attempt ing to ascertain the number of men between the ages of 19 and 26 who are American citirens; who are in good physical con dition; who have had at least one year of college, and who might be interested in a new primary course in civilian pilot training. The course would be gin early in February. Any young men who fill these above-mentioned require ments should contact Marshall E. Woodell, coordinator of civil ian pilot training, at the South ern Oregon College of Education in Ashland, Ore., at once. DIAL 4242 Personality Portrait'' 321 Medford lid aKw V7!fliira:i;--