Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, August 21, 1955, Image 21

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    o
O
G
G
O
G
O
O
O
O
O
o
o
o
03
o
n
O
G
O
O
O
O
o
o
Q
e
O
G
O
o
o
t)
o
O
O
o
o
G
O
O
o
o
o
o
G
o
o
Kin- tri. -ir gtt" a 4 l.
Mr. and Mrs. LaVern G. Marsh
Marsh-Pontius
Ceremony Held
Prospect Miss Ellon Marie
Pontius, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. L. V. Pontius, Prospect, be
came the bride of LaVern G.
Marsh, of Medford, in early af
ternoon rites July 27 at Sparks,
Nev. The bridegroom is a son of
D. B. Marsh, Stockton, Calif.
The couple was attended by
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Young, also
of Prospect, sister and brother-in-law,
of the bride. The bride's
parents also were in Sparks for
the ceremony.
The bride wore a white after
noon dress with pink accessories
and her sister was dressed in
blue with white.
Luncheon for the wedding
grpup was served at Harold's
clul).
The newly wedded couple
traveled through Nevada and
southern California. They live at
321 North Holly street.
Behavior of Women
At Sales Explained
Cleveland, O. (U.R) The
strange behavior of women at a
department store sale is per
fectly logical after all.
So reports Mrs. Virginia Miles,
a psychologist with the McCann
Erickson advertising agency.
Mrs. Miles says women will
reach into a neatly piled stack
of merchandise and take some
thing from the bottom "because
the top one might be shopworn
or she wants to feel she's making
her own choice."
THEIR FAVORITE PERSON
Boston (U.R) Bedros Asa-
doorian, 63, Roxbury variety
store proprietor, can't imagine
why he's so popular with hold
up men. Recently he was held
up and robbed for the 30th time
since he opened for business a
generation ago.
Window cords will last longer
and operate more smoothly if
they are rubbed with an oil
saturated cloth twice a year
America's greatest selection of children's shoes
Kids! have fun with
Andy Devine
Every Wednesday Night
on the new
Busier Brown
TV SHOW
"ANDY'S GANG"
For fun, laughs and thrills watch
Andy Devine star in the new
Buster Brown TV show every
week.
Se if on;
KBES-TV
5:3Q P.M. Wednesdays
Be sure to be 'at your TV set
Next Wednesday Night at 5:30
We'll Have Some Surprises!
LOGAN Boys' High
Shoe with sharkskin tip.
A toe he cannot abuse.
B, C, D. $6.95
. 1
l. "
(Landis-Shangle Photo)
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 p.m Friday Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 9
a m of the dav of publication and
for week dav news is 5 cro the
dav before publication
Sunday
12 noon to 5 p.m. Green
wich Village art fair, old city
park on West Main st., near
library.
1 p.m. Cebu swamp, Mili
tary Order of Lizards, Mrs. Hans
Rammin, 831 West 12th st.
Monday
1 p.m. Grandmothers club,
940 Whitman st.
Tuesday
10:30 a.m. WSCS, Firest
Methodist church, prayer circle,
11 a.m., business session; 12:30
p.m. luncheon; 1:30 p.m., pro
gram.
12 noon Rogue Valley Herb
society, picnic, Hawthorne park.
6:30 p.m. Medford Toast-
mistress club, picnic, Mrs. C.
A. Thatcher, 210 Beatty st.
8 p.m. Medford Truth Cen
ter, Unity, Room 203, Holly The
ater bldg.
8 p.m. DUV, courthouse.
8 p.m. Pythian club, Girls
Community club.
Wednesday
12:30 p.m. Past Noble
Grands club, Dyer home, 29
Myrtle st.
7 p.m. Kappa Delta soror
ity, Rogue Valley Country club.
Thursday
1 p.m. Sojourners club,
Medford hotel.
8 p.m. Phoenix Thursday
club, Mrs. Raymond Furry, 110
Third st., Phoenix.
Triday
11 a.m. Medford Truth cen
ter, Room 203, Holly theater
bldg.
The ill luck associated with
Fridays arose from its connec
tion with the crucifixion, ac
cording to the Encyclopedia
Britannica.
G I N A Black Patent
Dress Slipper for Sundays
and party wear. Also red.
AA to C
8'4 to 12 $6.45
12'i to 3 $6.95
OEA Board
Asks Increase
In Salaries
Increases from S300 to $500
above regular increments in all
Oregon teachers' salaries for
1956-57 were called for by the
board of trustees of the Oregon
Education association in an offi
cial action at a recent meeting
held on the Oregon College of
Education campus at Monmouth.
Concern over the increasing
number of educators leaving Ore
gon for better pair positions in
other states was one of three ma
jor reasons given by the 15
member board for its recommen:
dation to school districts. The
other two included the critical
need to attract into the teaching
profession a larger percentage of
well-qualified high school and
college graduates and the alarm
ing number of educators who are
leaving the profession for mark
edly improved salaries in busi
ness and industry.
The board gave special recog
nition in its action to the fact
that generally public school ad
ministrators' salaries have not
kept pace with other salaries in
education. "OEA salary studies
indicate a narrowing margin be
tween administrative and other
salaries in the profession," said
OEA President Antonia Crater of
Newberg, spokesman for the
group. "Also the increased pres
sures of administering a modern
school program have brought an
ever increasing mortality among
experienced administrative per
sonnel in Oregon," Mrs. Crater
concluded.
Unanimous approval of ; the
group was given a motion by Su
perintendent Robert Sabin of Co
burg in reference to Senate Joint
Resolution No. 4 as approved by
the 1955 Oregon State Legisla
ture. Sabin's motion called for a
recommendation to the OEA Rep
resentative Council, OEA policy
making body, to hold a full-scale
debate of this measure. He em
phasized that SJR No. 4 should
be given serious consideration
because it would allow the leg
islature to attach the emergency
clause to tax measures, thus as
suring enactment of such pro
grams for a two-year period be
fore referendum could be af
fected. Sabin explained that
"OEA must consider this mea
sure as a means of assisting the
legislature to find vitally needed
additional revenues for Oregon's
public schools."
Mrs. Maxine Smith, Medford
teacher and president of the De
partment of Classroom Teachers
of OEA, attended the meeting in
an unofficial capacity.
Later Mrs. Smith flew to Den
ver, Colo., for a meeting of the
classroom department presidents
of the 11 western states. This
8'i
AA to C
12'i
Easy lo Make!
m
, I (T" 7383
I
Build your own wooden
lawn or playroom chairs easy
to do saves many dollars be
sides! Woodcraft Pattern 7385: Sim
ple directions for making this
attractive, comfortable chair.
Actual-size paper pattern pieces
included, with easy-to-follow
number guide.
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,
embroidery, 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!
was a workshop session, with the
presidents reviewing school ma
terial and problems and planning
programs for the coming year.
The cow is an index of pros
perity for residents of the small
town of Betbania in southeastern
East Pakistan.. The villagers
keep cows, but not for meat,
drink or hides. The animals' im
part respectability to a family,
perhaps because the residents
lived so long near Hindus who
worship cows.
BUSTER BROWN
SCHOOL DAYS
JAMBOREE
shoes
Time for new; school shoes means time for Buster Browns.
Famous for over fifty years for the skilled workmanship and fine
materials that mean real quality. And most important, Buster
Brown's perfect fit protects growing feet and you can't buy
them unless they fit. Bring your youngsters in now and let us fit
them safely and surely with the Buster Brown 6-point fitting plan.
Q Oasiae &eeb I ' .
""WyM
WABASH Brown Mee
Toe Oxford. A shoe that
all girls like.
A to D
to 12
$6.45
$6.95
to 3
Textures, Colors, Patterns
New in Fall Fashion Picture
Versatile fall and winter cot
tons take a look at the calendar
and welcome cold weather with
exciting new textures, patterns,
colors and fashion silhouettes,
reports the National Cotton coun
cil. For going places be it college
or job this year's cotton knits
rate high in fashion mileage. The
knits are styled in charcoal
tones, as well as bright colors,
harlequin checks and stripes.
Destined for a bright career is
the striped cardigan and slim
skirt in fashionable cotton knit.
For a city-dark, city-smooth out
fit, the slim charcoal-colored
jumper with a wide cowl collar,
bare arms, and an Italian striped
T-shirt is tops.
For dorm-wear and warm-as-toast
sleeping, there's a football
set in red cotton knit. The cot
ton knit sweater top and Ber-
Plant Sprouts Used
To Teach City Kids
East Lansing, Mich. (U.R)
A child expert at Michigan State
university suggest a simple way
of acquainting urban children
with the knowledge of the sim
ple facts of plant growth.
To make plant growth more
understandable to children, Mrs.
Erna Fishaut suggested planting
seeds in a container where the
youngsters can watch the
growth process. She said chil
dren in University nursing school
have been fascinated by watch
ing ordinary lentils sprout in
moistened cotton.
In the home, an ordinary alum
inium, foil plate can be used on
which to spread the damp cot
ton. About three days after the len
tils are placed on the cotton, she
said they will begin to sprout.
This " simple procedure helps
children see at first hand how
plants begin their growth.
HARVARD ALUMNI
Cambridge, Mass. (U.R) A
Harvard Alumni Directory will
be distributed this September
for the first time in seven years.
The directory will list approxi
mately 116,000 alumni and will
contain 2,200 pages.
STILL SELLING"
Springfield, Mass". (U.R)
Lincoln C. Haynes, 90, who was
born ' the day Lee surrendered
to Grant at Appomattox, is still
selling shoes in a store here
after 75 years in the business.
About 80 per cent of all Nor
wegian citizens over 70 receive
old age pensions.
that fit . . . really fit!
LAREDO Red 2 Strap
Moc Toe Loafer. The
shoe that all little girls
wish for.
BARTON Girls All Over
White Saddle. A must for
very girl's wardrobe.
A to D
8V& to 12 $6.45
121 i to 3 $6.95
Sunday, August 21, 1951
muda shorts in broadcloth are
color - coordinated to striped
sleeves and socks. The high-rise
striped socks insure that when
winter sets in there'll be no cold
feet.
Plaids Are Terrific
What's the fashion huddle all
about? Cotton plaids, of course,
in authentic Scotch tartans and
modern stylized patterns. Foi
living the life of McTavish,
quilted plaid pedal pushers are
teamed with a dark broadcloth
skirt to make a lounger or study
outfit. For day and dates, a
princess jumper in quilted plaid
can be converted to after-five
wear when worn without its own
blouse.
Scotch plaids are among the
season's smartest raincoats. A
new version of the trench coat
in jade green broadcloth buttons
high at the neck for weather
protection, and has a Black
Watch plaid lining.
A raincoat that shows 'its
plaid is made in bright colored
water-repellent broadcloth with
a middy-type collar in plaid. The
lining is also plaid. There's a
matching umbrella and hat.
Jumper Popularity
There's greater variety, this
year in jumper styling with inter
est centered around new neck
lines and a choice of skirts
either wide, slim or with a long
torso line. Many of the jumpers
are designed to be worn alone,
or with blouses.
the suspender jumper with a
sleek princess fit is office-perfect
in blackened-brown cotton
tweed. A dark paisley blouse
with push-up sleeves gives it
daytime versatility.
Winter-warm quilted cottons
in plaids and prints are featured
in a variety of styles.
For flashing around campus,
the popular cotton car coat has
a snug winter feeling. Some are
styled in pastel cotton poplin
with a convertible hood and
blouse in gaily printed cotton.
Cotton quilting looks just as
pretty after dark in separates.
For a dance at the fraternity
house, a quilted printed camisole
is shown with a full skirt.
Career-Bound Cottons
Coming up in the world is
the srnart career or college
fashion that teams corduroy and
cotton prints together. The fall's
long lean look is seen in a three
piece ensemble that combines
these two cottons handsomely.
The style of the year features a
"skeet" jacket, copied from a
hunter's design with straight up-and-down
pockets and a slim
overblouse look. The skirt is
pencil-slim and the blouse is in
the same cotton print as the
lining.
luster
SHOE STORE
15 South Central - Fluhrer Building
Also Available at Park View Dept. Store, Ashland, and the
Buster Brown Shoe Store, Grants Pass
For more fun per party a
date dress of cotton calico by
Casino of California. Its charm:
a roll collar, long figure fit,
bustle-like bow. In party-night
black cotton.
Getting a big rush a dra
matic flower-printed corduroy
date dress by Emma Domb. The
neckline dips low, the collar
wide, and the skirt is flared for
a party-fling.'
Yes, Many Other Style
Besides These
Browini
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SUM
Xonscience Fund'
Of U.S. Treasury
Earns $1,895,258
Washington (U.R) A $5,
000 donation to the government,
forwarded recently from Ridge-,
wood, N.J., without any accom
panying explanation, caused no
surprise at the U. S. Treasury.
The department has been hap
pily accepting contribution1 since
1811.
All cash received in thit man
ner is entered in the treasury's
"conscience fund" and, just as
other government revenue, is
considered expendable. At last
count, total contributions to the
fund more than 50,000 of them
amounted to $1,895,258.
So regular are "conscience
fund" contributions, about one a
week, that estimates for them ap
pear in the federal budget $75,-
000 in this year's budget
The fund derives its names
from the fact that many of its
contributors are moved to action
by troubled consciences such
as the ex-GI from Alabama who
sent $5 to cover the cost of a
baseball glove he failed to return
to the Army, or the California
woman who sent the treasury
$50 because she thought her hus
band had been less than accurate
in filing their income tax return.
Some contributors send not a
word of explanation with their
donations. In most cases, donors
prefer to remain anonymous.
The usual contribution 'Gang
es from $5 to $10 and comes
anonymous from a small tcrvn.
The smallest contribution, two
cents, came from a little girl
who confessed she had misused
a two-cent stamp. An anonymous
person, apparently the possessor
of an extremely sensitive con
science, forwarded $30,Opo in
1916 without explanation.
A large contribution occasion
ally touches off a government
investigation. Following up on a
$5,000 gift several years ago,
treasury men found their man.
a conscience-stricken taxpayer
who, it was learned, was actually
entitled to an $11,000 tax refund.
A Biblical quotation, "Blessed
are the pure in heart, for they
shall see God," accompanied a
$2 contribution by an Indiana
man some time back. And a Brit
ish clergyman forwarded $14,
000 for an unidentified church
member who could not live with
a conscience that continually re-'
minded him cf his past as a smug
gler. . : , ;
On an average day some half
a million tons of silt ride the
Colorado river down to Lake
Mead, the huge reservoir created
by Hoover dam.
LITTLE MESA Misses
Red One Strap. A shoe
that will always stay on
with no slipping at the
heel.
A to D
8Vi to 12
A to C
$6.45
$6.95
12'A to 3