Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, February 08, 1956, Image 2

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    V
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Wednesday, February 8, 1958
Y Seeks
Equipment
For Nursery
Nursery equipment donations
for the proposed YMCA-spon-sored
nursery school are being
sought by the women of the Y.
The school, is being established
for any habit-trained pre-schoolers
whose mothers are enrolled
in the new Homemaker's Holiday
classes at the Y. ..
All kinds of materials are
needed, and it is hoped that
donors will feel free to give any
used toys that are still useable.
These could be educational toys
like building and alphabet
blocks, used crayons, wheeler
toys, simple ' jig saw puzzles,
story books, and children's rec
ords, according to Mrs. Stanley
Berger, director of women's pro
gram at the Y. Donations should
be taken to the Y building by
February 14. .
The school will be open dur
ing the Y class hours, 10 to 12
a.m. and X to 3 p.m. each Tues
day and Thursday, starting Feb
ruary 9. It will be supervised by
Mrs. Robert Newland and Mrs.
Richard Lamb, both of whom are
well-trained in nursery school
and kindergarten work, Mrs.
Berger states; '
Classes operating in conjunc
tion with the nursery school will
include a music appreciation
series, a copper, enameling work
shop, and a gym-swim consisting
of volleyball and calisthenics in
the morning, and Mrs.- Fixit, a
knitting workshop . and gym
swim consisting of beginner's
swimming, badminton, and calis
thenics in the afternoon. ' . . j
It should be noted that swim
ming is possible at this time
since the Y pool is heated to the
proper temperature both winter
and summer. Iristrtuctors for
these, classes are volunteers from
many Medford homes and busi
nesses, each of whom, is quali
fied in his own particular field.
Registration for the ; classes
will be at the first class session,
Thursday, February 9.
f- ...
Monthly Prizes
Awarded at Club
Camp White Prizes furn
ished by the American Legion
auxiliary of ' Medford were
awarded to veterans holding
high scores for January at the
last meeting of Camp White Vet
erans Bridge clAb. John Sol
heim was first, Walter , Grow
second and Bill Hickey third.
Mrs. T. J. Fuson and Mrs. Al.
Gilhousen were co-hostesses for
the buffet supper served follow
ing the play. They were assist
ed by the George Rodes. '
North-south winners were
Mrs. Frank Baker and Mr.
Hickey, first, 155 points; the
Howard Boyds, second, 153; Mrs.
Mary Sander and Mr. Rode,
third, 151; Mrs. Roy Pruitt and
' Mr. Solheim, fourth, 145.
East-west winners were Mrs.
Edna Miller and Mr. Grow, first,
166V4 points; Jack Harris and
Fred Stevens, second, 153VS;
Mr j. Josephine Clark and Mrs.
Burton Sims, third, 152; ' Mrs.
Van Gilbert and Mrs. Richard
Milestone, fourth, 14116.
To Meet
Phoenix Phoenix Thursday
club will meet February 9 at
1:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Jesse Wilson, Rocky View or
chard, corner of Roberts road,
Medford. Dessert luncheon will
be served by the hostess.
Cancer Control
Topic of Group;
Project Adopted
Mrs. Ray Frisbie spoke on
cancer control at a.' meeting of
Alpha Beta chapter of Beta Sig
ma Phi sorority February 2. The
meeting was held at - the home
of Mrs. Austin Murray, 1709 Le-
nora drive. : -v '
Mrs. Frisbie showed three
movies regarding cancer detec
tion and control. Following" the
movies there was a general dis
cussion period, and Mrs. Frisbie
then demonstrated the method
used in processing and making
bandages for cancer patients.
The bandages will be made at
each meeting held by the chap
ter. Mrs. Herbert L. Haglund
and Miss Jacqueline Walker
were appointed chairmen of this
service project. .
A regular -business meeting
was conducted by the president,
Mrs. Nils Edin. Plans were made
for a rummage sale which will
be held March 10. Mrs. Freder
ick Kruggel, Jr., Miss Jean Car
dona and Mrs. Robert Hubbard
were elected to the nominating
committee.
; Mrs. Hubbard announced that
a leap year party for members
of the chapter and their hus
bands and escorts will be held
March 3. The party will be giv
en by the new pledges.
The annual Valentine party
for chapter members and guests
will be held February 16 at the
home of Miss Walker, 2320
Kings highway. It will be a "se
cret desire" costume party and
valentines and handkerchiefs
will be exchanged between se
cret sisters. ,
Refreshments were served by
the hostess and Miss Joan Pence.
Moderator to Be
Guest in Medford
Dr. Paul S. Wright, Portland,
moderator of the 167th general
assembly" of the Presbyterian
Church, of America, will be hon
ored guest at three events in the
Rogue valley Thursday, ' Febru
ary 9.
, At 12 o'clock Dr. Wright will
be guest speaker at a men's
luncheon, to be ' held in First
Presbyterian church. At 6 p.m.
he will be honored at a dinner
to be held in the Medford. ho
- Thursday at 8 p.m. Dr. Wright
will be principal speaker at a
Presbyterian rally to be held in
Phoenix : Presbyterian ; church.
Ministers, elders and church
members from all parts of the
county will attend.
-
Tickets on Sale '
For Class Play '
Tickets 'for the annual senior
class play . of Medford Senior
High schools are now on sale
at the school office, it was an
nounced today. Telephone
orders will be taken, it was said
The play will be produced Feb
ruary 14 and again February 16
The play, "Dear Ruth" . by
Norman Krasna is being direct
ed by Robert Stedman and Miss
Sandra Laing is student direct
or. In the cast are Carol Den
man, playing the title role, Jo-
Ann Martin, Jack Gregory, Dick
Brown, Saundra Kittle, Honor
Stansbury, Janet Perry, Larry
Gants and Dick Arnold.
Pretty fnsemble
I Give him the'tie
ff . he himself icould buy. .A
yv- jlaWv- LjSjl'v)St3L?
. nwnniir " fcssMfw SBlsSSP-
"g o lit
- ' At all leading ; mmmmmJ .
..fTTff'.. , men's furnishing and 5- f j
jM7 & depDrt,,ient storK -
8
9267 JT
Art Collection Premiere Set March 3 in Portland
Portland The 101 paintings
from the Walter P. Chrysler Jr.
collection left New York Friday,
February 3rd, on a year long
circuit- of eight Ameriean mu
seums, and the world premiere
of the famous collection is sched
uled for March 3 to April 15 at
the Portland Art Museum. The
paintings, valued at $3,500,000,
will travel here along a secret
southerly route.
The vans will be doubly man
ned. They will travel in convoy
at two mile intervals. However,
drivers and other personnel on
the . vans will carry no weapons
and will not remain on post at
the vehicles at night.
State -police will be notified
by ticker of the convoy's arrival
at state lines. A discreet surveil
lance of the shipment will be
maintained from border to bor
der. An i hour-by-hour schedule
of movements will be sent in ad
vance to local police along the
route. Somewhere in Texas the
entourage will turn north and
head for Portland. The exhibi
tion will open at the Portland
Art Museum March 3d.
The send-off . Friday culmin
ated three years of vplarming. It
will end two years of intensive
work for Dr. Francis Newton,
curator of the Portland. Museum.
Dr. Newton has been putting in
days of fourteen to sixteen hours
at an East Side warehouse -with
the eager if not artistically liter
ate assistance of its employees.
The sculptured pieces in the
shipment are not to be part of
the full swing. They will remain
at the Portland Museum for a"
year and be. returned to New
York. The paintings will move
on to Seattle, San Francisco, Los
Angeles, Minneapolis, Kansas
City and Detroit."
This will be the first time that
so many of the more than 2,000
pieces in the Chrysler collection
will have been oh public display.
Individual - paintings have ' ap
peared from time to time in New
York City.
The pictures are going on the
trip with the protection of blan
kets, fiberboard, cellulose tape
and $3,500,000 insurance. They
will not be boxed an advantage
of vehicular travel. -In the past
collections have traveled by rail.
They have had to be-crated be
fore being submitted to the un
certainties, of parcel handling.
"The gallaries are sharing the
$25,000 cost of shipment, and a
contract was awarded after bid
ding by each of four major van
lines that have full forty-eight-state
licenses. The paintings
range in value based on the
amounts for which' they are in
sured from $140,000 down to
several thousand dollars. The
items were selected by Theodore
Rousseau, curator of the Metro
politan Museum of Art; Thomas,
Colt," director "of the " Portland
Museum, and Dr. William Suida
xf the Kress Collection.
Are" you active in a dub or or
ganization? The Medford Public
Library has books which, offer
practical help on all aspects of
club work.
If You Caleb
More Than One
Cold A Winter
Here's how to relieve suffer
ing fast! UseVicks VapoRub
the proved medication that
works two ways at once. '
When you rub it on, Vapo
Rub quickly relieves muscular
soreness. At the same time,--VapoRub's
medicated vapors
bring relief with every breath.
Soothing medication travels
deep into the nose, throat and
large bronchial tubes. Con
gestion starts breaking up. -Coughing
eases. Warming re
lief comes, lasts for hours.
So when colds strike, always
depend on Vicks VapoRub!
1 Dead line Sunday
at noon Saturday
Classified Is at
.. For parties or . play, - there's
nothing prettier than this easy
sew ensemble! Her favorite full
circle skirt on the sugar-sweet
dress; adorable jacket for cover
up. Even a whirly petticoat with
eyelet frosting to wear beneath!
Pattern 9267: Children's Sizes
2, 4, 6, 8,-10. Size 6 dress and
jacket require 2 yards 35-inch
fabric; V2 yard contrast 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 lst-class mail
ing. Send to Marian Martin, care
of Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept.,
232 West 18th St., New York 11,
N. Y. Print plainly NAME, AD
DRESS with SIZE, and STYLE
NUMBER.
Persons planning for retire
ment will be interested in the
many helpful books on this sub
ject at the NMedf or d Public Li
brary. ". - v '
WWW CMS
No more worry or wonder about
how your ready-mix cakes will
turn out! We have MIRRO pans
that are the right size and finish
for every baking need. Instruc
tions with your favorite mix will
tell you the size to buy. Don't
guess! Look for the MIRRO size
stamp on the bottom of every pan..
MIRRO Tubed Cake Pan
Leak-proof "Batter-Seal" loose bot-
torn, for perfect, easy-to-remove
quick-mix angel foods.
MIRRO Layer Cake Pans
These highly polished pans bake
nlr. through and through.
' Incn
Mirro Pie Pans 8" $1.00
Mirro Muffin Pans 12-cup .70
Mirro Bread Pans ......10" $1.00
Mirro Oblong Pans..,.....l 1" $1.00
Mirro Square Cake Pans 8" $1.00
MIRRO
Heart Mold
For pretty salad
molds, ice
cream molds,
and gelatin
desserts. V qt.
Alumilire 89c
Copper-Tone
$1.10
SPECIALISTS IN HOMEWARES
MEDFORD - CENTRAL POINT
Mere Ds mm MEWS for
Blogue River Valley Women!
THE MEDFORD YMCA IS PROUD
TO ANNOUNCE IT'S NEW
- -
Ul
liU
MEETS
Ul
LR
Classes Start T(0M(DMW!
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9th
010:00 A.M. To 11:45 A.M.
VARIETY IN MUSIC
Enjoy Folk Music, the Classics, Choral Music, the History of Jazz, and What's
.New in Records and Record Equipment. .
Qualified. Instructors from each Field,
COPPER ENAMELING WORKSHOP
Learning to make jewelry, etc. ;..
Mrs. Edgar Sims, Instructor .. ...
GYM SWIM
Volleyball, Calisthentics, Free Swim Time.
Donald Day, Instructor
Ol:00 P.M. To 2:45 P.M.
MRS. FIXIT
Painting Know-How, Faucet-Fixing, Repairing Toys, Wood Refinishiig, Under-
standing Electricity. . -
Qualified Instructors from each Field. ,
KNITTING WORKSHOP
Individual instruction in hand-knit fashions, Including nubby-knits, stoles,
dresses, accessories.
Miss Grace Smith, Instructor. - .
GYM SWIM
. Beginner's Swimming Lessons, Badminton, Calisthentics. -
Donald Day, Instructor . . -
FEJ UJ Q , NONE to women already members of the Y. '
C Ck) $5 to women interested in joining the Y for a class
only. . i . ;
Please
Note:
Insufficient Enrollment in any of
above classes will necessitate
postponement or cancellation of
class. Phone 2-6295 for Full
Particulars. , .
Published In cooperation with
the Medford YMCA by your
GENERAL ELECTRIC DEALER in
Medford and Ashland . . .
As An
ADDED
CONVENIENCE
For
HOMEMAKERS
A NURSERY
SCHOOL
for any pre-schop!. child
who is habit-trained super
vised by qualified personnel,
will be available for those
enrolling in ' the Daytime
Classes.- .- (
Fees for the school are grad
uated tom aid the mother of
several pre-school young-
sters.
JOIN THE
Y TODAY!
You'll be missing something
if you don't!