TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Friday, February 24, 1956
SHADY COVE -TRAIL
Pre-School Clinic Slated
By EVELYN P. WATSON
Shady Cove-Trail There will
b x pre-school clinic at the
Shady Cove school March 5 from
9 a.m. to noon for all children
who will enter the first grade in
September. Marie Larson will
be one of those helping. The
clinic will be held at the Elk
Trail school in the afternoon of
the same day.
Charles Chubb of Shady Cove
is back from a trip last week to
southern California.
Mrs. Ed . Learning of Shady
Cove is planning to go with her
team to bowl in a tournament
at McMinnville, Ore., over the
week end.
Tom Quail of Shady Cove has
been released from Community
hospital following treatment for
a broken jaw and other injuries
suffered in an auto accident last
Friday evening. At last reports
he is progressing satisfactorily
at home.
Mrs. Scottie Patrick of Trail
is visiting with her niece and
friend in Mill Valley, Calif., and
also receiving medical treatment
while there.
. Mrs. Verna Graham of Mc
Minnville, former resident of
Shady Cove, with her daughter
and husband, Mr. and Mrs. Ted
McEldowney of Detour, Mich.,
were week end guests of Mr,
and Mrs. Jim Cassal of Trail.
They also visited with Mr. and
Mrs. . Carroll Watson and fam
ily of Shady Cove on Sunday
afternoon. Mrs. Russell Graham
and' baby son Brent of North
Bend accompanied the McEI
downeys and Mrs. Graham as
far as Medford where she visit
ed with her sister and husband,
Mr. and Mrs. Len Crum.
. Mrs. Raye Morgan of Trail
would like to thank all her
friends who sent cards, gifts and
flowers during her recent ill
ness. She is convalescing nice
ly now and expects to be able to
get out a little soon.
Mrs. Kenneth Vincent of Glad
stone who spent some time here
helping her sister-in-law, Mrs.
Bob Vincent, with the new baby
boy, David, has now returned to
her home. Young Kenny Vin
cent, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Vincent, has returned home
from a visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Hufteling and children of
Central Point. '
Mr. and Mrs. . Fred Ridenour
of Hillsboro stopped en route to
had made to Los Angeles, to
visit with his sister and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Watson of
Shady Cove. Mrs. Watson and
son, Lane, accompanied them
to Portland where she attended
a gift show and visited with
friends, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd
Shafer and family and Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Frank.
The Shady Cove Rotary club
held a ladies night recently at
the Shady Cove VFW hall with
the dinner cooked, prepared and
served by the Rotarians. Slim
Lieders and Ray Briggs were
the chefs, assisted by other mem
bers. Mrs. Russell Stelle played
for group singing. Games were'
enjoyed following the dinner.
Members and guests present
were Mr. and Mrs. Louis Bel
vail, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Conway,
Mr. and Mrs. Miles Williams,
, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Nutt, Mr.
and Mrs. Johnny Jones, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Briggs, Mr. and Mrs.
Dolf Larson, Mr. and Mrs. Ed
Houston, Mr. and Mrs. Ole Horn
seth, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Strbther,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hopkins, Mr.
i and Mrs. Carroll Watson and
Slim Lieders of Shady Cove, .'fid
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hubbell and
Mr. and Mrs. A. Myklebye of
Trail. Bill Neely of Conger-
Morris was present as a guest
and showed a film on the work
ings of the United States post
offices.
Mrs. Erika Stanley of Lake
Creek was guest of honor at a
pink and blue shower given for
her at the Lake Creek Grange
hall by Mrs. Larry Perry, Mrs
Gordon Stanley and Mrs. Edith
Hertager. Refreshments were
served following the opening of
the gifts. Guests present-were
the Mesdames Karl Stanley, Roy
Exceptional Students
Take Extra Schooling
Hobart, Okla. (U.R) Keep
ing backward pupils after school
Is a standard practice, but for the
other extreme, exceptional stu
dents, the. Hobart school system
is experimenting with a new
class.
' , Students in the class, taught
by Mrs. Velma Porter, are grade
school youngsters whose capa
cities for learning and develop
ing new skills are not easily ex
panded in . ordinary classroom
work.
; The class . includes three
j'ounger children who attend a
morning , session and five older
students who go hv the after
noon. According tqtheir . abilities,
each child learns reading, handi
craft and any other activity in
which he shows . interest and
aptitude.
, A number of the students
show considerable talent in
drawing and clay modeling and
the girls show skills in knitting
and weaving, Mrs. Porter said.
; One girl has .become; quite
adept at typing.
Stanley, Tom Stanley, Harve
Stanley, Darrel Stanley, Robert
Fisher, Augusta Perry, Lottie
Van Scoy, June Kalil, Ruth Hert
ager, Ozie Burrell, Marie Bur
rell, Fay Burrell, Dorothy Rags
dale, Jackie Klingle, Ruth
Klingle, M. Gardner, Betty Brad
shaw, Ellyn Charley, Clara
Campbell, Lucille Cave, Eliza
beth Davidson, Betty Pruitt and
daughter, Teresa, Elda Jamon,
BessiS Arens, Lilian Meyer and
children, Cecelia Fichtner, Caro
lyn Marsters, Margie Warrick,
Kathyn Wells, Mildred Messal,
Bette umdel, Vickie Dugan,
Millie Bradshaw, Ann Halsey,
all of Lake Creek, Dorothy
Shearin of Eagle Point, and Wes
ley Jones of Shady Cove and
the Misses Judy Bradshaw, Linda
Hertager, Shirley Pettygrew,
Gail Perry, Nancy and Cheryl
Stanley, and Janice and Beckie
Shearin.
Ladino Growers To
Consider Commission
A hearing at which ladino
clover growers may express
opinions on the desirability and
necessity for a commodity com
mission will be held in "the
courthouse auditorium at 10 a.m.
Feb. 29, according to J. F. Short,
director of the state department
of agriculture. A similar hearing
is scheduled for Madres Feb. 28.
Paul T. Rowell, chief of the de
partment's division of market
development, will preside.
About 96 per cent of the pres
ent ladino clover acreage in Ore
gon is in Jefferson county, with
the remainder in Josephine and
Jackson counties and the .Wil
lamette valley.
Petitions asking for the hear
ings were sponsored by. the Jef
ferson seed growers. They seek
to "stabilize the industry."
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS " . .
; Thomasville, Ga. President Eisenhower on bis doctor's golf
instructions: "' '"'''.'
"You're going to hear a lot of laughter.' My doctor has given
me orders that if I don't start laughing instead of cussing when I
miss these shots, then he is going to stop me from playing golf."
kharicumT" Sudan-'A tenant farmer who escaped from ihe
"Black Hole" prison room a: Kosxi where 19 other farmers suffo
cated to death: ,
"After two hours we felt a strong heat. We couldn't breathe.
The doors, two small glass windows near the ceiling and the wood
en shutters were closed. We shouted, cried and banged on the
doors. We begged the police for water and told them we were suf
focating. It was to no avail."
New York Harold Stassen, President Eisnehower's disarma
ment adviser, on the "ultimate weapon," the Intercontinental bal-
listiCffTHiSSilff; "' : . r ;
! "Neither side can contemplate; a situation in which either the
use or threat to use armed might can result in anything but mutual
tragedy." - .-"
- Washington Secretary of Agriculture Ezre T. Benson on the
farm' problem: ' V
, "Surpluses are smothering farm prices and income. That's why
our farm families are not sharing as Ihey should in this nation's
record prosperity."
Chinook Winds Can e Blessing Along
Rockies; Catastrophic in Alps Region
wasnmgion iurj. it maynowing downsiope into tae val-i highway departments of
come at any hour, day or night.
On the long eastern slopes of
the Rockies it is a wintertime
blessing. It would be welcome
right now. .
North of the Alps in Switzer
land, Southern Germany, and
Austria it is a curse. If it came
now, if would carry catastrophe.
In this country it can bring
"warmth to the bones and joy to
the heart."
Mass Dread in Europe
In Europe it arouses mass
dread and can, they say, 'breed
violence and murder.
Here it is the Chinook, or
"snow eater," a boon to the peo
ple fed up with winter.
There it is the Foehn," hated
and feared because it can set
off avalanches and floods.
In both regions, and in many
others : where it occurs under
different names, it is a wind spil
ling over a mountain range and
leys and plains beyond,
Authority for these observa
tions . about the Chinook or
Foehn, or in Argentina the Zon
da, is R. E. Spencer, assistant
chief of the weather bureau's
Climatological Services . Divis
sion. ; ''
In Any Season
The Chinook may be -a gentle
breeze or a gale. It may occur
in any season wherever moun
tain ranges and wind circulation
are right. ';
Because they flow" downward,
these winds become compressed,
heating up the drying out as they
descend. The eastern slope of the
Rockies is gradual. The north
ern slope of the Alps is precipi
tousThat makes the difference.
In this country a gentle Chi
nook can bring welcome relief
from cold and crippling snow. It
does a quicker and "vastly bet
ter" snow removal job than the
tana, Wyoming, Colorado
the Dakotas combined.
Mon-
and
TWICE TOO OFTEN
Bridgeport, Conn. flj.PJ
While recuperating with his leg
i na cast, Marshall ; Harris wa
forced to make a one-story jump
to escape from a fire. He broke
the leg again.
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