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TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Friday, August 5, 1955
Society and Clubs
Miss Oregon
To Be Guest
Of Festiva
Ashland Miss Oregon of
1955 Dorothy Johnson of Beav
fe;rton will be the guest of the
Oregon Shakespearean festival
association Saturday evening, at
the second performance of the
season's tragedy, '"Macbeth."
The play was Miss Johnson's
choice , and appropriate one,
since her "talent selection"' for
the Atlantic City Miss America
contest in September is Lady
Macbeth's famous sleep - walking
scene.
Miss Johnson, who has never
before seen the scene staged,
says she is coming to Ashland
"to see how it's done." While
she is in Ashland, she will be
coached in the role by the play's
director II. Paul Kliss, with
whom she worked at the Magic
Hing Theatre in Portlan.
Miss Johnson studied drama
for three years at the Portland
Civic Theater. She was first in
terested in doing a part from
Shakespeare for her talent test
by Diretcor Kliss and by Judge
Frances Cook of Beaverton, one
Of the festival's leading ladies in
the late 1930 s. While in Ash
land, Miss Johnson and Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Zimmerman of Beaver
ton, who will accompany her on
the trip, will be the guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hardy of
Ashland. Mr. Hardy is Judge
Cook's brother.
Business Women
Attend Meeting
Mrs. Harriet Watson, presi
dent of Medford Business and
Professional Women's club, and
Miss Laura York, past president
of the Oregon Federation of Busi
ness and Professional Women's
clubs, returned Sunday evening
board meeting held in Bend.
JThey were accompanied by
Mrs. Mae Dawson, Grants Pass,
news service chairman for the
federation.
Sessions wre held at Pilot
Butte inn with Mrs. Cora Pirtle,
Eufene, federation president,
presiding. The Rim Riders' posse
served a buckaroo breakfast for
the group 6unday morning.
Fall Glamour!
ci7r.:
9192 ' 12-20 40
How to dazzle your "special
audience"? Sew this glamorous
fashion (in crepe, faille, or tissue
sheer wool); watch the admiring
glances as you enter! Open neck
line, lovely lines of bodice and
skirt combine to make this
dress most beautiful of all!
Pattern 9192: Misses' sizes 12,
14, 16, 18, 20; 40. Size 16 takes
38 yards 39-inch fabric.
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 1st
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,
SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.
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Medford Teacher
To Be Speaker
For Conference
Mrs. Maxine Smith, Medford,
president of the Department of
Classroom Teachers of Oregon
Education association, will be
one of the speakers for the sev
enth annual leadership confer
ence of Oregon Education asso
ciation. It will be held August
7-9 on the Oregon College of
Education campus, Monmouth.
Also attending from Jackson
county will be Roland Parks,
Ashland, who will represent the
Oregon High School Principals'
department Mrs. Viola Pomeroy,
Eagle Point, Department of
Classroom Teachers; Lee Rags
dale, Medford Teachers' associa
tion; John Stuckey, Ashland,
who will . represent Future
Teachers of America and DeVere
Taylor, Medford, representative
of the Jackson County Division
of ORA.
Public reaction to the 1955-56
education goals of Oregon's
teacher organizations will be as
sessed by a panel of non-educator
leaders at the conference, a
release from OEA states.
Keynoting the opening session
at the Sunday evening banquet,
August 7, will be Rex Putnam,
Salem, state superintendent of
public instruction. He will speak
on the "Meaning and Signifi
cance of the White Hoose Con
ference on Education in Ore
gon." Miss Martha Shull, Port
land, vice-president of the Na
tional Education association, will
highlight the Monday evening
banquet with a talk on "The
Work of NEA."
On the Tuesday morning
agenda two speakers will share
the limelight. James King, su
perintendent of the Lebanon
public schools, will speak about
"Professionalism in Teaching"
and OEA- Executive Secretary
Cecil Posey has entitled his ad
dress "The Professional Pro
gram of OEA and its Relation
ship to the Xocal Association."
Cliff Robinson . of the Oregon
Department of Education staff
will be chairman of a Tuesday
afternoon panel composed of
presidents of OEA departments
and chairmen of OEA statewide
committees. Members of this
panel will tell of the program
and plans for educational work
by their committee or depart
ment during 1955-56.
The three-day session will
end Tuesday afternoon with a
summary discussion led by Mrs.
Antonia Crater, Newberg, OEA
president.
CALENDAR
Calendar notices and news for
the society section of The Mail
Tribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition is 1 D.m Friday Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 8
a m of the day of publication and
for week day news is 5 D.m the
day before publication
Friday
6 p.m. Jolly Stitchers club,
home of Mrs. Don Robins, 1002
Jasper street.
Saturday
12 noon Opening of Jubilee
art show, Southern Oregon So
ciety of Artists, at Jacksonville
City hall.
8 p.m. Dance, Rogue Valley
County club.
Visitors Leave
Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Randolph,
Boise, Ida., left Monday for their
hopie after visiting here with
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Davis at the
Davis' summer home, Idlewile,
on the Rogue river. The Ran
dolphs also visited Mr. and Mrs.
R. L. Henselman, 333 Ardmore
avenue. Mrs. Henselman is a
niece of Mr. Randolph.
California produced 29,000,
000 farm chickens in 1954.
Smart TV Square
Favorite "pineapples" form
the pretty pattern of this cover-
to beautify, protect your pre
cious TV set. VERY easy to cro
chet. Pattern 7110: Crochet TV
square 24-inches in No. 30 mer
cerized cotton; smaller in No. 50;
larger in crochet, knitting cot
ton. Send TWENTY-FIVE cents in
coins for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for 1st
class mailing. Send to Medford
Mail Tribune, Household Arts
Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old Chel
sea Station, New York 11, N. Y.
Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS
and PATTERN NUMBER.
ORDER our 1955 Alice Brooks
Needlecraft Catalogue. Enjoy
pages and pages of exciting new
designs knitting, crochet, em
broidery, iron-ons, toys and nov
elties! Sdnd 25 cents for your
copy of this wonderful book
now. You'll want to order every
design in it!
Three Guests Play
At Riverside Club
Three guest players attended a
meeting of Riverside Bridge club
Wednesday afternoon. They were
Mrs. L. E. McClintock and Mrs.
Clay Cornett, Roseburg, and Mrs.
G. E. Mernin, Crater lake.
North-south winners were Mrs.
Mernin and Mrs. Alto Pruitt,
first, 12312; Mrs. Fred Purdin
!nd Mrs. C. E. Chamberlain, sec
ond, 115; Mrs. B. L. Sanderson
and T. J. Fuson, third, II2V2;
Mrs Al Gilhousen and Mrs. F. R.
Baker, fourth, 111.
Gen. and Mrs. J. P. Vachon
headed east-west winners with
122 points, and second , went to
Mrs. W. W. Stevenson and Mrs.
Ben Todd for 113V2 points. Mrs.
Fuson and Roy Pruitt took third
with 111V4 points and Mrs. Cor
nett and Mrs. McClintock were
fourth with 110 points.
Police Aid Asked
In Locating Man
Medford police were contacted
by Harry A. Wood, Box 658, Ft.
Morgan, Colorado, recently in
an attempt to locate Lionel
Keen, according to Sergeant Lyle
C. Perkins.
Keen is believed to be in or
around Medford, Perkins said.
Anyone knowing the address or
whereabouts of Wood is request
ed to contact the city police
department with the information.
One-fourth of the nation's
steel comes from the Pennsyl
vania plants.
St. Peter's Church "
Plans Reception
For Missionaries
The Rev. and Mrs. W. L.
Burce and two children will be
honored at a reception to be
given by St. Peter's Lutheran
in the basement of the church,
congregation Tuesday, August 9.
The event will be held in the
basement of the church, 1920
East Main street, beginning at
8 p.m.
Mrs. Hugh Huntley is chair
man of the reception, and wom
en attending are asked to take
cookies.
The Rev. and Mrs. Burce and
family are arriving in San Fran
cisco this week from New
Guinea, where they have been
engaged in missionary work.
The Rev. Kenneth Korby, pastor
of St. Peter's church, and Mrs.
Korby motored to San Francisco
to bring the family to Medford.
Master Points
Won by Players
Play was for master points
when Medford Duplicate Bridge
club met August 2. Forty players
took part, and the Mitchell move
ment was used. Mrs. Al Gilhous
en and Mrs. T. J. Fuson were
hostesses.
North-south winners were Mrs.
Fred Rehling and Emery Wheat,
first, 159 points; Mrs. Josephine
Clark and Mrs. Alto Pruitt, sec
ond, 153; Mrs. Lloyd Johnson
and John Solheim, third, 149V2;
Miss' Isobel Stuart and Mrs. B.
L. Sanderson, fourth, 1401i.
Winning east-west were Don
Reverman and John Polski, first,
157 points; Mr. and Mrs. H. J.
Boyd, second, 146 V2; Al Gilhous
en and Mrs. Ray Wise, third,
145V; Mrs. G. E. Mernin and
William Kennedy, fourth, 144V&.
Texans Guests
Of Relatives Here
Mr. and Mrs. Burton Burrus
and two children, Burton Jr., and
Elizabeth, Bay Town, Tex., were
guests earlier this week of Mrs.
J. C. Cass, 1080 South River
side avenue, and other relatives
here. . Mr. Burrus is a nephew
of Mrs. Cass.
The visitors were accompanied
by Mrs. Burrus' nephew, Hays
DeHart of North Carolina.
The travelers, who are mak
ing an extensive tour of the
west, expressed the opinion that
Oregon is the most beautiful of
all the states they had visited
and were especially impressed
with Crater Lake. From here
they planned to go to Canada.
Motorcade Reaches
Mouth of Columbia
Astoria (U.R) An automobile
caravan tracing- the route cover
ed in 1805 by the Lewis and
Clark Expedition, came to the
mouth of the Columbia river
yesterday evening.
The group, making the trip on
the 150th anniversary of the
Lewis and Clak trek, started off
from Fort Mandan, N.D., on
July 27.
The 10-car caravan stopped at
Fort Clatsop at 6 p.m. The fort,
eight miles southwest of here,
was the end of the trek west for
the famed expedition through
the Northwest.
One of the leaders in the cara
van was Mrs. Esther Horne,
Waphetin, N.D., great - great -granddaughter
of Sacajawea,
Shoshone guide for Lewis and
Clark.
The caravan also stopped at
Seaside, where the earlier expe
dition made salt, and went on
to the Clatsop county fair
grounds at Astoria, where Har
old Coe, Clarkston, Wash.,
spokesman for the group, was
given the key to the city by Eric
Hauke, president of the city
council. '
Reckless Flying .
Charged in Dogfights
Bakersfield, Calif. (U.R) An
agricultural pilot was accused of
reckless flying today as a result
of dogfights between planes of
rival crop dusting firms over
which should dust a cotton field.
Steve Straub, operator of an
Agricultural Aviation company,
was accused in a complaint - of
making "fighter passes" on an
aircraft flown by Ruben Rhor
back, flyer for a rival crop dust
ing firm. Rhorback signed the
camplaint against Straub yester
day. The Kern county sheriff's of
fice and the Civil Aeronautics
Authority began an investigation
of the incident after witnesses
told of seeing 'the rival planes
diving swooping at each other
in a battle for business. '
Sheriff's deputies said several
incidents of this kind have oc
curred in the nearby Arvin area
recently.
West Coast Airlines Asks Service Addition
Bills on Shellfish
Become Effective
Salem (U.R) Three new laws
went into effect in Oregon this
week calling for changes in com
mercial use of shellfish.
One permits sale of commer
cially taken razor clams in all
counties of the state for the en
tire year, Before, sale of com
mercially caught clams between
June 20 and Sept. 20 was allow
ed only in counties bordering
the ocean.
Another law removes the re
striction against taking razor
clams on land abutting state
parks. However, such areas still
are kept closed by order of the
State Fish Commission. A third
law allows harvesting of scallops
by the holder of a commercial
clam, scallop and mussel license.
Save the half grapefruit shells
from breakfast to make this at
tractive luncheon salad. Scoop
out the membranes and line
shells with a generous amount
of country style cottage cheese.
Top with overlapping well-drained
canned cling peach& slices
and sliced fresh strawberries.
Garnish plate with a cluster of
fresh stemmed cherries.
Seattle West Coast Airlines
has filed an application with the
Civil Aeronautics Board to ex
tend service to Reno, Nev., from
Boise, Ida., and Klamath Falls,
Ore., and to connect Klamath
Falls and Boise via two new Ore
gon cities, President Nick Bez
announced Thursday.
The airline proposes service
between Klamath Falls and
Boise with stops at Lakeview
and Burns, Ore., and between
Boise and Reno via Winnemucca,
Nev. Proposed service between
Klamath Falls and Reno would
be non-stop.
West Coast Airlines presently
serves 44 cities along a 2,200
mile route in Washington, Ore
gon and Idaho.
One of every 60 of the na
tion's workers is employed by
a hospital. o
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PRESENTS A
Shakespearean Film Festival
Our First Offering
SUNDAY - MONDAY - TUESDAY, AUGUST 7-8-9
The
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LAURENCE OLIVIER'S
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AUGUST 28-29-30
"Julius Caesar"
With Marlon Brando
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10 A.M. to 5 P.M. Sundays
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