Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, June 12, 1955, Image 18

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    rOTJ MEDFORD OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Sunday, June 12, 1955
Jaycettes Plan
Recipe Exchange
Medford Jaycettes will meet
"Wednesday, June 15, at the home
of Mrs. Garry Shuler, 131 Tripp
treet, at 8 p.m. Mrs. W. W.
Smith and Mrs. Calvin McKib
ben will serve as cohostesses. All
members are requested to take
their favorite recipes for ex
change during the evening's program.
Auxiliary to Hold 1
Annual Election
Woman's auxiliary tof Jackson
County Medical society will
meet at the home of Mrs. M.
Donald McGeary, . 3182 South
Pacific highway, Wednesday,
June 15, at 6:30 p.m. A pptluck
dinner will be served.
Cohostesses will be Mrs.
Charles F. Hoey and Mrs. Wil
liam Miller.
Election of ' officers will be
held.
Special! Purchase
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MAIL
TRIBUNE
Couple Here ,
On Annual
Valley Visit
Gen. and Mrs. Amos A. Fries
of Washington, D. C, left Fri
day evening for Portland after
a four-day visit in the valley.
General and Mrs. Fries had at
tended the national convention
of Sojourners' club, a Masonic
organization for men who have
no home lodge, and of which the
general is past national presi
dent. Following the convention
they visited Mrs. Fries two sis
ters in Los Angeles and their
daughter and son-in-law, Com
mander and Mrs. Robert Merritt,
who are stationed at Monterey
Naval base.
In Medford they were at the
home of Mrs. Volney Dixon and
other relatives and friends
greeted and entertained them.
Herbert Elmore, a nephew of
Mrs. Fries, took the couple on a
motor tour of the valley.
They were entertained at the
home of Mrs. Purkeypile, sister
of General Fries. Wednesday
Miss Beulah Warner, long-time
friend of the couples, honored
them with a luncheon at Rogue
Valley Country club. Miss Henri
etta Medynski was co-hostess
with Miss Warner and those en
joying their hospitality were
Mrs. Fred Slagle, Mrs. J. R.
Woodford and Mrs. Volney
Dixon .
Friday Mr. and Mrs. E. E.
Gore gave a small luncheon at
the Hotel Medford for the vis
itors. Thursday evening General
and Mrs. Fries gave a family
party at the Hotel Medford for
relatives and friends still re
siding in the valley. About 27
attended.
Mrs. Pauline Elmore, Mrs.
Fries' sister, died during the
past year.
General and Mrs. Fries were
graduated from Medford High
school in 1893. Mrs. Fries is a
daughter of the late Dr. Joseph
Wait, pioneer physician of this
district. The general entered
West 'Point in 1894 and has had
a military career of distinction.
During World War I, when
chemical warfare was intro
duced, he was made chief of that
department with headquarters
in Paris. For notable inventions
in this line, he was awarded the
distinguished service medal. He
has also served on rivers and
harbors projects in Oregon,
Washington and California.
Since his retirement the; gen
eral has devoted his life to mak
ing the country aware of the
menace of communism and has
lectured and written on that sub
ject. In Portland General and Mrs.
Fries will be guests of the gen
eral's brother, Archie Fries, and
will continue home via the Ca
nadian Pacific railway with
stops at Winipeg, Quebec and
Montreal.
Brides "Dumb
About Checks
Says Tracer
By JAMES GEGGI8
Boston (U.R) A' woman who
should J know acknowledges
what men already know that
most women are "dumb" when
it comes to writing checks. Espe
cially, brides.
Pretty Jean Manson, insur
ance firm check tracer, says a
woman's handwriting on a check
is better than a man's but too
often she forgets one detail
like signing it.
Miss Manson's firm, an in
surance company, receives some
$3,000,000 yearly in unidentified
checks.
The 20-year-old sleuth tries to
find who sent them.
Her work - has won praise
from dozens of investigative
agencies, but Miss Manson says
she's tired of being a snoop.
"I'll get married some day
and concentrate on watching
children," she says.
At present, she is a long way
from marriage. She works alone,
surrounded by city directories
and telephone books. Much of
her time is spent in ' her com
pany's immense filing rooms
where she riffles through thous
ands of names.
Occasionally she gets a check
for has much as $1,000, signed
by an illegible name. -
Miss Manson contends that
women make more errors than
men with checks. And she says
young brides are the worst of
fenders. "A woman's handwriting is
better," she says, "but too often
she forgets to include an invoice
or business address. A bride
writing her husband's checks
will us her maiden nam every
time."
Hemefy "Conned'' fee
Now Ready for Picnic
New York (U.R) Canned
"ice" is the latest in picnic ac
cessories. One manufacturer is
marketing a canned liquid chem
ical which will freeze more rap
idly than just , plain water and
stay frozen longer. The refrig
erant, which is to be used canned
and not opened, solidifies in a
few hours in a refrigerator freez
ing compartment or home freez
er. It can be used over and over,
and is suggested for packing
around foods and beverages on a
picnic, motor trip or for home
barbecues or parties.
Morgan-Bennett Wedding
Held in Gold Hill Church
Gold Hill The marriage of
Miss Nancy Mae Bennett to
Claude D. Morgan was solemni
zed at a 2 o'clock ceremony Sat
urday, June 4, at Gold Hill Com
munity Methodist church. The
bride is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Preston Bennett, Gold Hill,
and the bridegroom is the son of
Mr., and Mrs. Joseph Morgan,
also of Gold Hill.
The double ring ceremony was
performed by the Rev. Gerald
Geer, pastor of the church. The
church was decorated with bas
kets of white iris and mountain
fern with twin seven-branched
candelabra flanking the altar.
Mrs. Norman Gail was soloist.
Mrs. Roy Eskew played the ac
companiment and the wedding
march.
The bride was given in mar
riage by her father.' Her gown
was of white nylon net over taf
feta, ballet length, and her halo
headdress of sheer net with bows
of seed pearls held a finger-tip
veil of illusion net. She carried
a white Bible topped with white
carnations.
The matron of honor was Mrs.
Dan Dollarhide, sister of the
bride. Her dress was of ice. blue
satin and she carried a colonial
bouquet of white iris and pink
roses. Candlelighters were
Misses Marge and Daisy Bennett,
sisters of the bride. They wore
matching dresses of nylon sha
dow organdy in pink and blue
respectively with wreaths of
rosebuds and forget-me-nots on
their hair and wristlets of white
carnations.
The brother of the bride
groom, Joseph Morgan, served
as best man and ushers were
Carl Boland and Dan Dollarhide.
The bride's mother wore a
dress of grey with white acces
sories and a pink rosebud cor
sage. Mrs. Joseph Morgan's dress
was of royal blue and she wore
pink accessories and a corsage
of pink rosebuds.
Following the ceremony a re
ception was held in the church
parlors. The table was decorated
with pink roses and white can
dles. Mrs. Jack Garrison, of Med
ford, baked the cake and assisted
with its serving. Mrs. Alvin
Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Morgan
Conn, Santa Ana, California,
aunt of the bridegroom, presided
at the punch bowl, assisted by
Mrs. John Cogswell. Mrs. May
belle Rains had charge of the
guestbook.
The couple spent a honeymoon
to the coast. The bride is a stu
dent at Crater High school in
Central Point and bridegroom
attends college in Ashland. They
both plan to resume their studies
this fall in Ashland.
Sup
Repo
reme Session
rts Planned
Reports of the supreme session
held June 5-9 in Detroit will be
given at the regular meeting of
Zuleima temple, Daughters of
the Nile, Saturday, June 18, at
Grants Pass Masonic temple.
The business meeting, sched
uled for 2 p.m., will be preceded
by a dessert course at 12:30 p.m.
Temple dancers will be in
charge. Medford members who
plan to attend are asked to make
reservations with Mrs. E. B.
Price, 2-2691.
,Mrs. Raymond Reter, Medford,
temple queen, and Mrs. George
Guldager, Eugene, junior past
queen, were delegates to the
supreme session. They were ac
companied to Detroit by 18
members of the patrol and by
Mrs. Michael Beck, Medford,
and Mrs. George Bryant. Co-
quille.
Zonta President
Assigns Members
To Committees
Mrs. Effie Kurtz, new presi
dent of Medford Zonta club, pre
sided when the group met
Thursday noon at the Jackson
hotel. Mrs. Kurtz announced the
standing committees for the
coming term.
The attendance committee j
will be Mrs. Celia Martin, chair
man, and Mrs. Florene Bolton;
finance, Mrs. Jean Fish, chair
man, Mrs. Dora Gates and Mrs.
Edith Gifford; membership, Mrs.
Violent Anders, chairman, Mrs.
Oletha Olsen and Mrs. Evelyn
Crain; program, Miss Eula Win-
terrnote, chairman, Mrs. Irean
Grigsby and Mrs. Eva Marsh;
fellowship, Mrs. Millie Wilson,
chairman, Mrs. Eloise Winkle-
beck and Mrs. Mabel Conger.
Service, Mrs. Elsie Butler,
chairman, Mrs. Jacque Lenox
and Mrs. Lorraine Evenson; in
ternational relation. Miss Jose
phine Kirtley, Mrs. Crain and
Mrs. Thora Lawrence; publicity,
Mrs. Jean Hart, chairman, Mrs
Grigsby; public affairs, Mrs.
Ethel . Tennant, chairman, Mrs.
Dorothy Ginn and Mrs. Grace
Holmes; status of women, Mrs.
Hazel Platz and Mrs. Ethel Mc
Intyre. A picnic meeting will be held
July 14 at the Bolton home with
Miss Kirtley and Mrs. Grigsby
assisting Mrs. Bolton on the ar
rangements. Air Conditioning
Declared Healthful
Omaha, Net). (U.R) You can
forget those fears that working
in an air-conditioned building in
the summer, then walking into
a steaming-hot street will affect
your health.
So says John W. James, Chica
go, vice-president of the Ameri
can Society of Heating and Air
Conditioning Engineers.
James said reseach experts
have shown that there is no
harmful "shock effect" from go-"
ing into a warmer atmosphere.
It has not been determined,
he said, which temperatures are
most healthful. However, he
said, it is known that cool air
benefits sufferers of asthma and
hay fever.
To Hold Meeting
Eagle Point Officers will be
elected at a meeting of the Wo
men's Missionary group when
they meet Monday, June 13, at
8 p.m., at the home of Mrs J. C.
Lusk, Eagle Point. Thos attend
ing should take beads and pic
tures which will be sent to a
Navajo Indian Bible school. Any
one interested in missions are
invited.
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