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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1955)
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Wednesday, June 29, 1955 Oregon School Added to List At AAUW Session Los Angeles The addition of three colleges and universities to the list of institutions meet ing requirements for member ship in the American Associa tion of University Women . was approved yesterday at the after noon session of the association's national convention in Los An geles. The institutios are: Mid land college, Fremont, Nebr.; Northern State Teachers college, Aberdeen, S. D.; and Pacific university, Forest Grove, Ore. These additions bring to 366 the number of institutions ap proved for AAUW membership eligibility. Graduates of these colleges and universities who hold degrees that meet the AA UW requirement of a basic foun dation in the liberal arts are now eligible for membership in the Association. All degrees of Mid land and of Northern State Teachers college are approved; for Pacific university, the B A. and B.S. degrees will now admit to AAUW membership. The association now has over 136,300 members, with 1,310 local branches organized in every state, and in Hawaii, Alaska, Guam, and the District of Columbia. Delegates heard Dr. Helen D. Bragdon, general director, re port on the role of the associa tion's national office in Washing ton, D.C., at the opening session Monday at the Embassy Audi torium. Mrs. Susan B. Riley, Nash ville, Tenn., national president, addressed the convention Mon day night saying "Believe and act on the belief that men are capable of making choices, and that value judgments are im portant if you want to mould a future in which man is in formed, free, unafraid and invincible." Shady Cove HEC Picnics in Park Shady Cove Shady Cove Grange HEC members held a picnic at Casey's park June 14. Guests present from other Granges were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Chamberlin, Mrs. Rosie Smith, Mrs. Winnie Brown and Mrs. Pearl Lusk, Eagle Point; Mr. and Mrs. Harold Densmore and daughter, Sandra, Phoenix Grange, Mn. Richard Pfeiffer, Shady Cove. Mrs. Paul Motschenbacher will be hostess for a family pot luck supper at her home on July 12 at 6:30 p.m. A short HEC business meeting will follow. Oven or spit barbecued chick en served with ice-cold spiced canned cling peaches is delicious fare. Buy the peaches already spiced or heat a few hole spices and a little vinegar with the peach syrup and let the tender peach halves soak in the flavor for 24 hours. League School Topic of Article . The kindergarten for hard of hearing children which Medford Junior Service league operates in here is the subject of an ar ticle in the June issue of Hearing News, the official publication of the American Hearing society. It is written by Mrs. B. Brandt Bartels, member ; of the league who served as teacher at the kindergarten until the arrival of Miss Minette Shanahan last fall. Mrs. Bartels tells of the founding of the kindergarten by the league, tells of the methods used in instructing the deaf, how the league raises funds for its operations and of the coopera tion of the community in the project. Editor of the magazine is Mrs. Margaret Rostel, Washington, D. CBoth Mrs. Rostel and her husband, the late Ernest Rostel, formerly were on the staff of the Medford Mail Tribune and were well known in Medford. Winners Announced By Camp White Club Camp White Winning cou ples for the last session of Camp White Duplicate Bridge club were Mrs. T. J. Fuson and George Choate, north-south, Gen eral and Mrs. J. P. Vachon, east west. Mrs Fuson and Mr. Choate scored 131 points, and the Vachons, 105V&. Additional north-south win ners were Mrs. Frank Baker and Mrs. Jack Love, second, 105; Mrs. Fred Purdin and William Hickey, third, 100; Mrs. R. J. Conroy and Mrs. W. W. Steven son, fourth, 97 points. Other east-west winners were Mrs. Fred Rehling and Mrs. E. K. Ricker, second, 90'i: Mr. and Mrs. Joe Clark, third, 87 points and Asa Kimball and Burton Sims, 86, fourth. Former Residents Visit in Medford Mr. and Mrs. O. K. Anderson and two sons left Medford Sat urday for their home at Louis ville, Ky., after a two weeks' visit here with his mother, Mrs. Stella Anderson,' 617 North Bart lett street, and a sister, Mrs. Ed Goodwin and family of the Applegate, as well as other friends and relatives. He is meteorologist for the state of Kentucky with. offices at Standif ord airport. Mr. Ander son is a graduate of Medford High school and was on the staff of the Medford weather bureau for nine years. Since leaving Medford he has been stationed at Oakland and Burbank, Calif., in Alaska and in Manila. Half-Size Outfit 14K-24K'' I 9147 SMART for now ideal for early fall too! This sun 'semble is young, new, flattering it's designed to fit shorter, fuller figures perfectly. Curvy bodice has built-up back, lingerie-concealing straps. Boxy jacket is slimming cover for cooler weath er! Pattern 9147: Half Sizes UVz, 16V4, I8V2, 2012, 2212, 2412. Size 16V dress takes 3V4 yards 35-inch. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step.' Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern, for lst class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Two Clubs Hold Picnic in Park Mistletoe club and RNA Juve nile club held a picnic and wiener roast June 23 in south Hawthorne park. A' program of games ended with baseball. The next Mistletoe club meet ing will be an evening picnic for club members and their families at the Michael Beck home on Forest creek July 13 at 6:30 p.m. ADOeMim 9ISPIAV. Aluminum Pitcher.... Wonderful bargain. 2l2 quart polished aluminum pitcher. Ideal for ice water, iced drinks, etc. With ice bridge. Limited quantity. FREE PARKING! VALUE U METAL PICNIC HAMPER SC $5193 Special LJ O Plaid Pattern Enameled Interior 14x10x10 Siie Your Choice Pitcher Or Hamper At 1.90 ,h OR BOTH $349 FOR ONLY FREE DELIVERY! gffi SPECIALISTS IN HOMEWAtESI MEDFORD O CENTRAL POINT Visit Our Store For Your Picnic, Outing & Bar-B-Q Supplies! BEST QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICES! Prospect Groups ! Install Officers At Dinner Meeting Prospect Prospect Lions club and auxiliary held joint instal lation of officers in Prospect Community hall June 22. The ceremony followed a banquet. Mrs. Steve Larson, past presi dent, installed the auxiliary of ficers. They are Mrs. George Hubbard, president; Mrs. Victor Chapman, vice-president; Mrs. Kansky, treasurer; Mrs. Darwin Bevins, secretary; Mrs. Ralph Young, sergeant-at-arms. Lewis Harding, Grants Pass, international counselor, was in stalling1 officer for the men's club. Inducted into office were George Hubbard, president, Lowell Ash, first vice-president; Victor Chapman, second vice president; John Gartman, third vice-president; Paul Pierson, sec retary - treasurer; James W. Grieve, lion tamer;The Rev. Rob ert Greene, chaplain; Steve Lar son and Jack Hollenbeck, direc tors. A five-year perfect attendance pin was awarded to Wallace Din kins. Sixty-five attended. . Harry Gooder of Shady Cove Lions club, invited the group to attend the joint installation of the Shady Cove Lions and auxil iary held at Rogue River lodge Friday, June 24. Arboretum Head Visits in Valley Dr. Brian Mulligan, curator of the Washington arboretum at the University of Washington, Seattle, with Mrs. Mulligan and their two sons, are guests in Medford of Mrs. E. B. Hanley, Ross lane. Mrs. Hanley has served on the editorial board of the arboretum's publication, and has contributed articles. Dr. Mulligan is interested in the native plants and flowers of this area, and has been making collecting trips to various dis tricts of interest. The Mulligans have visited the Oregon mountain and Mt. Ash land areas, and yesterday went to Crater Lake National park with Mrs. Hanley and Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Leavitt, Mr. Leavitt formerly having been superb tendent of the park. Miss Claire Hanley, Jackson ville, president of the Oregon Federation of Garden clubs, and Mrs. H. O. Smith, Cave Junction, a former president of the fed eration who has made a study of wild flowers in her district, and Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Nichol,- Med ford, accompanied the Mulligans on their trip to Oregon moun tain. Mrs. Nichol also is a for mer state officer of the garden club federation and she and Mr, Nichol have an extensive collec tion of colored pictures of Ore gon wild flowers. Dr. Mulligan also visited Ash land mountain to collect wild flower specimens and was ac companied on this trip by Mar cel LePiniec, Medford nursery man who is an authority on native plants. Dr. Mulligan spoke for a meet ing of Oregon Association of Nurserymen held here Monday. Grange Central Point Grange Lecture hour and 4-H program will precede the regular meeting of Central Point Grange, Friday night, July 1. A Red Cross meeting for civil defense has been called at 8 p.m. in the Grange hall by Mrs. O. A. Eden, Medford. Informa tion will be given that we may be prepared in case of natural disaster or war. Maj. Gen. J. H. Hicks of Civil Defense in this area, . and Col. H. J. Meiring, food committee chairman, will be introduced. Mrs. C. W. Anhorn has charge of the 4-H program to be pre sented at 8:30 p.m. Included will be a short skit and reports by those who attended the annual 4-H summer school. Miss Judy Gebhard presents the Juvenile Grange number. Please bring sales slips for the Juveniles. Agriculture committee has charge of the display table. Plans for a Grange picnic are' being discussed. The date and place will be announced soon. : ; For unexpected Friday night guests, serve frozen fish sticks topped with a lemon, butter and almond sauce. Cook the fish sticks according to the package directions and top with the sauce just before serving. If dressed for time you'll find the canned diced almonds come in very handy. . MEETING AT Kelly home in Philadelphia for wedding reception, three sisters, all beautiful, greet photographer. From left: Grace Kelly, film star; Mrs. George Davis, Jr. (right) ; Elizabeth Anne Kelly LeVine and husband Donald LeVine, Pittsburgh, Pa. Movie gossips say Grace may wed within next year. (International) Bible-Reading Grandmother Boosts Winnings to $16,000 New York i(U.R) Mrs. Kath erine E. Kreitzer said today the nicest thing about her winning $16,000 on a television program is that it has caused a lot of peo ple to "dust off their Bibles." The quiet little grandmother from Camp Hill, Pa., who has read the Bible daily for most of her 54 years, correctly identi fied the seven brothers of the Biblical character, Joseph, last night on the Columbia Broad casting program, "$64,000 Question." Mrs. Kreitzer won $8,000 last week by giving "Mene Mene Tekel Upharsin" as the words constituting the handwriting on the wall. She had until last night to decide whether she wanted to risk losing the money in trying to double it. "The $8,000 looks like a lot of money," she said. Then she asked for the $16,000 question. She stepped into a sound-proof booth with a one-way window that cut off her view of the audience and was given 30 sec onds to concentrate before try ing to identify Joseph's youngest brother and then six others. The studio audience was tense as an Maternity Tops SIZES 10-18 r?.- ; 7iH You'll find these pretty tops so cool for summer so flatter ing for the mother-to-be! Sew both, in dressy and casual ver sions trim with gay embroi dery! ' Pattern 7114: Misses' Materni ty Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Tissue pattern, transfers. State size. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst class mailing. Send to Medford Mail Tribune, Household Arts Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, ZONE, PATTERN NUMBER and SIZE. ORDER our 1955 Alice Brooks Needlecraft Catalogue. Enjoy designs knitting, crochet, em pages and pages of exciting new broidery, iron-ons, toys and novelties! Send 25 cents for your copy of this wonderful book now. You'll want to order every design in it! fggrnY l Special Offer Before You (Buy! WURlilZER See for yourself the fun end relaxation a new Wurlitzer piano will bring to your home! Should you decide to buy, all money paid for rental will bo applied to the purchase price." Purucker Piano House 111 North Central Phono 2-5702 unseen orchestra played sus pense" music. When the time was up she promtly gave Benjamin as the name of the youngest and then, without faltering, named Reu ben, Simeon, Levi, Judah, Issa char and Zebulon, as six of the other, il. Mrs. Kreitzer, who works as a typist at the naval supply depot in Mechanicsburg, Pa., appear ed to be taking the whole thing a great more calmly than most members of the audience. "I didn't go into this because we had any pressing need of money," she said. "The money is just luxury." Next week she will again ap pear on the show and will get the choice of going home with $16,000 or trying to double it. If she correctly answers the $32, 000 question she sets the oppor tunity of coming back the follow ing week to try for the jackpot question of all jackpot questions, the $64,000 question. If she misses anywhere along the line, she gets a Cadillac con vertible as a consolation prize Women Needed in Political Offices, AAUW Group Told Los Angeles U.R) The American Association of Uni versity Women today took up the question of woman's role in politics and heard two experien ced members urge that more women run for elective office. Bertha S. Adkins, assistant to the chairman of the Republican National Committee, told dele gates attending the AAUW bieri nial convention that "govern ment needs able women, and I only hope that in our next elec tion we will see more women than ever as candidates." Adkins, of Washington, D.C., said millions of women work on the "inside" of politics, in party and precinct work. But she add ed, "I am here to encourage more of you to get on the 'out Side' to run for public office as politicians." SIZES COMPARED Finland is about 1.9 greater in area than Great Britain. CALENDAR Calendar noticaa and Dews Set the lociet? section of Tha Mail Tribune must ba. submitted in writing and deadline for the Sun day edition la 1 p.m friday Dead line (or the weekly calendar U fi ajn of the day of publication and for week day newt ia vjti the day. before publication Wednesday , 7 p.m. Combined Medford and Grants Pass Toastmistress clubs, Rogue Fiviera, Pacific Highway North. Family Here Mr. and Mrs. Don Lundgren, Dresser, Wise, left Tuesday aft er visiting here with Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Franklin and Mrs. Franklin's son, Dennis Lund gren, 1224 Stewart avenue. Here Monday to visit with the Med ford family and the visitors were Mr. and Mrs. John Cook, rela tives from Klamath Falls. Don Lundgren is a uncle of Dennis. Dennis Lundgren recently re turned to Medford after spend ing three weeks iiu Roseburg with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Frauendiener. if 'fcff W'Y I uano nisrt il are sweet-tempered on L J C washday JJ Vano does a perfect Ljrt T ' starching iob everv rime. Jf aaves work... saves time. SEN SAT NEW electric shaver for women - One side' of the comb is ground to the correct fineness to shave the legs The other side of the comb is ground to just the correct thickness for underarm use Now, for the first urne, an electric shaver especially designed to serve the needs of women. ONLY the Lady Sunbeam has a shaving head with one edge especially ground to shave the legs, and the other edge especially ground for underarm use. It is small no larger than a com pact. Ends muss and fuss, nicks and cuts of soap and blade. The Lady Sunbeam's gentle, sure performance gives you a new easy way to keep neat, fresh and dainty. Wonderful at home, or for travelling. 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