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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 7, 1952)
Society and Clubs Mothers Weekend To Have Program With Accent on Arts Ashland "Accents on Arts" will be the theme of the mothers weekend program to be held Sat urday and Sunday at Southern Oregon college, according to Miss Sylvia Ready, Klamath Falls, general chairman of the tradi tional event. Emphasis on drama, music, art and styles will be featured during the two-day event which will include exhibits, teas, enter tainment and business sessions by mothers and undergraduates. Invitations have been sent moth ers of 500 students now attending college. Assisting Miss Keady with general program plans are Miss Patsy Lynn, Pasadena, current president of sponsoring Asso ciated Women Students and Miss Emma Redbird, Ashland, incom ing AWS president who will be Installed at the Saturday lunch eon. Other committee chairmen in clude Misses Claire Cross and Carol Wikstrom, Medford; Misses Rosemary Ring and Dorothea Coe, Ashland; Miss Mary Ellen Yost and Dareld Vcrley, Tule lake, Calif.; Miss Jean Small and Miss Jeanne Clough, Lakeview; Miss Carrol Sheehan and Miss Mary Swart, ' Portland; Miss Sally Ahlstrom, Grants Pass; '' Miss Phyllis Sabin, Springfield; Miss Kaye Benzel, North Bend; Miss Gloria Robinette, San Jose; and Miss Mary Campynol, Mil Final Meefing Planned By Sams Valley Group Sams Valley Sams Valley Parent-Teacher association will ' hold the final meeting of the current school year, Friday, May 9, at 8 p.m. at the school. Mrs. Ben Day, fjrst president of the organization, will install the new officers for the coming year, with Mrs. Frank Straus being named as the new presi dent. Mrs. C. L.. Michael will serve as vice-president, Mrs. Jean Smith as secretary, and Mrs. T. O. Price will be treasurer. There will be a full length movie and refreshments, and It is hoped that there will be a full attendance for this final meeting. Half-Size Style Quaker Missionary To Speak Thursday At Friends Church Miss Irene Webster - Smith, British Quaker missionary to Japan for many years, will tell of her experiences in working with the Japanese war criminals following the last war at a meet ing at Friends church Thursday, May 8, at 7:30 p.m. Miss Webster-Smith's talk will be part of a program planned for Christian Home. Week. A family night program is planned, with games and refreshments as well as the talk. The church social committee extends an invitation to all fam ilies to attend the family night program and hear Miss Webster- Smith speak. i The missionary is visiting Dr. . and Mrs. Alvin Roberts, Central Point, who she met in Japan while Dr. Roberts was stationed there with the army of occu pation. - Major Assigned To Overseas Duty Applegate Major Lorna Ku- bli, formerly of the Applegate region and now serving with the Women s Air force, was re cently assigned to European duty according to information receiv ed by her father. Chester Kubli, Provolt. In recent months Major Kubli has been director of per sonnel and administration for a i r technical intelligence at Wright-Patterson Air force base, Dayton, O. Major Kubli was recently the subject of a feature article writ ten for the Portland Journal by Louise Aaron, staff writer. Miss Aaron quoted Major Kubli as saying that a career in the women's branches of the armed forces not only provides a means of serving one's country, but provides security for the Individual. The WAF officer will round out 10 years of service in July. She was first commissioned in the old WAAC in September, 1942, and later transferred to the Women's Army corps when the auxiliary was changed to the newer branch.1- She then transferred to the WAF in 1947. For a time Major Kubli serv ed in Portland as personnel of ficer at the air base, leaving there late in 1950. CONTINENTAL TRAILVVAYS BUSES LEAVE MEDFORD NORTHBOUND 5:15 A.M. 9:40 A.M. 1:00 P.M. 3:35 A.M. 10:40 P.M. PACIFIC STANDARD TIMI SOUTHBOUND 3:52 A.M. 7.31 A.M. 4:05 P.M. 11:35 P.M. Trailways Bus Depot 148 No. Front Phone 3-1853 LYLE D. ROGERS, Agent III I 1 Here is flattery for the short er waist, fuller figure in the sea son's most popular design! Diag onal button closing and hip pocket are fashion news this summer! This pattern is simple to fit, because it's cut to fit YOU! Easy to iron because it opens flat! Pattern R9199: Half sizes 14'4, 16V4, 18W, 20V4, 221-4, 24V4. Size 16V4 takes 4 yards 39-inch fabric. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated sew chart shows you every step. Send Thirty-fivfe Cents in coins for this pattern to Marian Martin, care of the Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept.. P. O. Box 6740, Chicago 80, 111. Print plainly your NAME, ADDRESS, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Phoenix Couple Guests of Honor Phnpin Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hackett, Roxy Ann court, Phoe nix, were honored at a dinner Sunday which celebrated their 35th wetiding anniversary. AHonrtinu the dinner were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Edward and children, Bend Ore.; Mr. ana Mrs. A. D. Redfield and Shirley, r.lonHnlp Ore.. Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hackett and family, Mt. Shasta. Calif., Mr. ana Mrs. Lloyd Dewey and children. Cen tral Point; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lamb, Phoenix, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Lybrant and son, Jay, Ashland. Couple To Observe 50th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. Winton Mead ows, 250 Lozler lane, will cele brate their 50th wedding an niversary Sunday, May 11. Open house will be in their honor at the family home, and friends and relatives are inviteS to call between Hie hours of three to five o'clock. Mr. and Mrs. Meadows have lived in Jackson county since 1935. Meffiodi'sf Class Plans Dinner Meetinq Friday Shipmates class of First Methodist church will hold the monthly potluck dinner Friday, May 9, at the church. All members and friends of the church are invited to attend. A varied program will follow dinner. KaDDa Delta Southern Oregon Kappa Delta Alumnae association will hold a meeting tonight at Rogue Val ley Country club. The group will gather at the club at 7 o ciock for dinner. One-a-Day Wonders Howard Association Plans Final Meeting Last meeting of the year for Howard Parent-Teacher associa tion will be held at 2:30 p.m. Friday, May 9, at the school. Officers for the coming year to be installed by Mrs. Frank VanDyke are president, Mrs. W. B. Hewitt; vice president, Mrs. Robert Brown; secretary, Harold Boner; treasurer, Mrs. Robert Ottoman. Mrs. Herb' Llngren, program chairman, has announced that the guest speaker, R. L. Jones, will outline the YMCA summer program. Students from the first grade rooms of Mrs. Solln and Mrs. Arney will present a folk dance. Refreshments will be served by mothers of first grade pupils under the direction of Mrs. Claude Ingram, Mrs. Don Stien metz, Mrs. Vern White and Mrs. Willie J. Jones. Mother's' Club Oak Grove Kindergarten club will hold the final meeting of the school vear at Oak Grove school Wednesaay, May 7, at 7:30 p.m. CALENDAR Calendar ootlcei an6 news fol (he society lection of The Mall rrlbunt mail be submitted la writing, and deadline lor the fun day edition la 1 p.m. Friday Dead line for weekly newa la t p.m. Ui day before publlcaUon. and dead line for the weekly calendar u 9 am. of tbe day for publication Wednesday . 6 p.m. Medford bethel, Job's Daughters, potluck dinner fol lowed by meeting at 7:30 p.m. 6 p.m. Medford chapter, American Gold Star Mothers, Inc., Mrs. Oscar S. Anderson, 218 Winema way. 8 p.m. DBE, Girls Communi ty club. y 8 p.m. Providence guild, Sa cred Heart hospital social room Thursday 1 p.m. St. Peters Lutheran Aid society, at church. , p.m. Medford Sojourners club, Medford hotel. 1 p.m. Adarel Social club, Mrs. H. C. Goldsmith, 150 Ross lane. . 1 p.m. WCTU, Girls Com munity club. krVCS. fl r If II I I il ,1 I I kVAMERICA'S Wednesday. May 7. 1931 MEDFORD (OREGON! MAIL TRIBUHE THUEE On The Side By E, V. Durling (Distributed by King Ftiturtt Syndlcjtt, Inc.) Love In hfr ilii playing. And ihfrt delicious death. Lov on her lips It straying And warbllnf in hr breath. Love (n her breast sits panting And swells with soft desire. No urace or charm Is wanting To set the heart afire. John Gay. 71 13 I 4&bi n EIGHT-TO-THE- INCH cross- stitch! You can do a towel a day easily! Fun to make, fun to use, with their gay motifs. Get seven new towels, begin these today! Kitchen-towel motifs that are different, easy! Pattern 7113: transfer of seven motifs 5V4x8 inches. Send TWENTY-FIVE cents in coins for this pattern to the Med ford Mail Tribune, Household Arts Dept., P.O. Box 5640, Chi cago 80, 111. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS and PATTERN NUM BER. Exciting! Our 1952 edition of Alice Brooks Needlecraft Book! Brimful of new ideas, it's only Twenty Cents. NINETY-ONE il lustrations of patterns of your favorite needlecraft designs, plus SIX easy-to-do patterns printed right In the book. GREAT ALL NEW 1952 REFRIGERATOR -BUY! I v The all new SEE IT NOW This treat new refrigerator fhe Ineet ever to bear the Zenith acme . . . featuring MORE of everythlnf that everybody wanta meet I Ift BIO . . . 10 cubic feet of wonderfully convenient atorage space, featuring Ave dky tinctively different tones of Horace and complete alien flexibility to every home refrigeration aeed. Add to this the new Zenith FAST AUTO MATIC DEFROST and THERMOSTATICALLY CONTROLLED BUTTE CONDITIONER plus such other wonderful features at shelves la the door, slant twin crlipers that ftve a fuD bushel of moist cold storage . . . plus a giant 62 lb. freeter locker and all porcelain Interior. See It and re will any It's America's grestest vara In saperb, el-featire hoeae refiig eratlea. And best of all, Zenith it priced fsr leat than many refrigerators) having comparable lestarea. Don't raise Zenith. Set the brri newest refrigerator leeey. aTftcajNCY tout rati $ PtKfB POt 319 95 MMAl TIADt-vM-IAsY TMMB 3 West 6th St. Phone 2-5201 SB fflQQ0fl?7QBG (3o I and Mabel were very happy to gether. Sidelights The price of everything Is going up. During World War II Extension Specialist Gives Family Advice On Fear of Darkness Jackson School Students At SOC Library Class . Ashland Eight sixth grade pupils from the Jackson Ele mentary school at Medford appeared Tuesday before the elementary school library class at Southern Oregon college, ac cording to Jeanctte Smith, acco ciate professor of education. The youthful students discuss ed the use of their library and presented reports of books read recently. Mrs. Precia Medley ac companied the group. The col lege class will observe the same students at work in tnelr own library next week, Miss Smith reported. There is much room for Im provement in the design of auto license plates. The most, attract ive design in my opinion is Wyo ming's with the bucking broncho. Louisiana's with the pelican is also a standout. Incidentally, on the Colorado plate is the slogan "Colorful Colorado," on the Georgia it is "The Peach State," New Mexico, "Land of Enchant ment," Minnesota, "Ten Thou sand Lakes," Wisconsin, "Amer ica's Dairyland." and New York, "The Empire State." However, Texas, so often accused of being boastful, has just a plain num bered plate. That s very strange, Doesn't seem right. The Lone Star State license plate should be distinctive. How about put ting a Texas steer on 'it next year? Or would an oil well be more appropriate? Says Sho "So you are thinking of ask ing that platinum blonde who acquired 10 husbands before she was 39 for some helpful hints on husband hunting for your Horses & Women files," writes a Chicagoan. "I haven't had 10 husbands but I have had one hus band for ten years and I am prouder of that record than if I had acquired 10 husbands. Prac tically any woman can get a hus band. It takes an intelligent woman to keep a husband happy. Perhaps you had better dig down in your files and send that blonde charmer a few helpful hints on how to hold a hus band." Briefly The curve ball and the spit ball were both originated by members of the Brooklyn Na tional League club, former by W. A. Cummings, latter by El mer Stricklett. . . . Sophie Tuck er was once billed in vaudeville as "the Mary Garden of Rag time." She switched from this to "The Last of the Red Hot Mamas." Pasting By Laraine Day Durocher. First lady of baseball. Laraine and Leo have been married five years now. Everything seems all right so far. However, it is said the sixth year is the most difficult to survive In matrimony. Those who pass the sixth grade have a good chance to enjoy a golden wed ding. I can tlunR of only two other celebrated ballplayers who married famous actresses and they were both members of the New York Giants. Rube Mar qunrd married Blossom Seeley. Mike Donlin married Mabel Hlte. The marriage pf Rube and Blos som was not a success. But Mike Don't be upset if your child shows some fear of the dark, Tom Poffenberger, extension family life specialist at Oregon the cost of a B-29 bomber was state college, reassures parents. l"?'. B-4Ue!Ut one time or another Almost uui 1 1 uri , ur:ifsiicrii ui a smiiiai task, costs $1,800,000 . . . Mary Garden at one time during her operatic career weighed 169 pounds! She reduced 30 pounds by working out on a rowing ma chine, drinking lemon water and substituting for a large dinner a meal consisting of the tails of six crawfish. Asides Lenin predicted "the United States will spend herself into de struction. If things keep going on the way" they have been, Lenin may qualify in the same class as a prophet as Nostradamus. . . . Another great man who would have never seen the light of day if his folks had practiced birth control was Henry Clay. He was a seventh child. Henry's mother gave birth to 20 children. Nine by her first husband, 11 by her second. Career Girls It lakes the average business girl 15 minutes to dress in the morning. Most career women wear' out at least 30 pairs of nylons annunlly. So states a statistician. Perhaps we can get some Milwaukee stenographer to check on that. Or perhaps you could ask your charming ama nuensis. We have nothing on wearing out nylons in our Horses & Women files, but there is a. notation that, a red-haired stenographer of Manhattan claimed she could get dressed and ready for the office in seven minutes. every youngster expresses this alarm. But it is hard for parents, to decide whether to ignore, shame, punish or console the children when this fear arises. - Some child-guidanct advise tha Spartan-like treatment of shut ting the door firmly and leaving the child alone, no matter how much he calls or cries. Usually, however, these feari are real ones, and every effort should be made to help the child overcome them, he explains. Mother should not hesitate to leave the door open slightly or even keep a low light on If such methods reassure the child. It is a good idea, too, to play these games, though. The child should be given a sense of being aafe, with Mother and Dad right with him as long as he needs them. If parents don t make an issue of the matter and gradually help tne youngster understand that there is nothing to be afraid of, he will usually overcome his fears before long, according to the specialist. TAKE WATCHDOG. TOO Providence, R. tl. (U.R) Twenty-three times in the last seven years, burglars have brok en Into Edward Harris diner. On one trip they even made off with his watchdog. Boy Scout News Phoenix Scouts The Phoenix Cub Souts. Pack 15, will meet Thursday, May 8 at 7:30 p.m. Mothers of Den 2 scouts will serve. Each cub is to take a half-dozen cookies. COST OF READING CUT Fort Worth, Tex. U.R) Tar dy book borrowers got a break under a lowered fine schedule announced by the Fort Worth public library. Instead of the traditional two-cent daily fine, it now comes to less than one cent daily. 5 FLIGHTS SOUTH FR0IY1 MEDFORD EVERY DAY Serving 32 California Otios PHONE MEDFORD ,2-5851 Ti -For Mother! A Wonderful Gift Ij II, I 1 I . il I jj Ver ipyY- w"'e oiitx ft) See the pretty bubblet wafting from our store D ) h L , ?S , v I f r, entrance ofl this weekl We're literally )) )S U I If effervescihg in a fragrant fizi of White Satin SS )s i ff S ( ... a delicate, dew-fresh fragrance another of the SS s l J ' ' I CS world's most talked about perfumes by Angelique. P Acf As'c 'or " now ' our Perfume Counter. !j rVme, J SO lo H 00 S S Cofejne. II 1i to t 10 ) 5) y VlV f eVslfoowflV. HoikMJJS 5 ! I YOUR CHARGE VlTl Main and Bart,ett Sts- j! ACCOUNT INVITED yV&f ' Phone 2-6428 I? ; ! , Jj SPECIALISTS IN HOMEWARES I