o
G
T0 MEDFOD (OMGOH) MAIL TRIBUNE
aMozart Requiem
On Radio Sunday;
Announce Program
. Bruno Walter will conduct the
rarely-performed Mozart "Re
quiem" (K. 626) KYJC-CBS Ra
dio, March 11 at 11:30-1:00 p.m.,
PST in the second and final
broader-st of the New York Phil
harmonic Symphony's Mozart
festival.
The "Requiem" will be per
O formed by four distinguished so
loists, Irmgard Seefried, so
prano, Jennie Tourel, mezzo
soprano, LeopoldF Simoneau,
tenor, and William Warfield,
bass-baritone, with the West
minster choir directed by Dr.
John Finley Williamson.
In addition to the "Requiem,"
Dr. Walter will lead the orches
tra in a performance of "the
"Little" G Minor Symphony of
Mozart, (K.183), a work which
0 dates from the composer's 17th
year and marks an important
development in his style and
emotional power.
The "Requiem" was Mozart's
last composition, and he died be
fore completing it. Full scale
concert performances of the
Qvork are rare. The only previ
ous performance of the work by
the New York Philharmonic
Symphony was in 1941, with Dr.
Walter conducting.
Two of the solisls, the Cana
dian tenor Leopold Simoneau
and the Rochester, New York
born baritone William Warfield
will be making their debuts
with the Philharmonic in this
performance. Miss Seefried and
Miss Tourel are both familiar to
the Philharmonic's CBS Radio
listeners.
O
Martha Wright, CBS radio
singer, Count Basie, one of the
great jazz pianists, composer,
singer Matt Dennis, and Thomas
Hayward, tenor of the Metropol
itan Opera, will join in a pre
St. Qpatrick's day program on
KYJC-C8S radio's "The Wool
worth Hour" Sunday March 11
at 1-2 p.m. (PST).
Continuing the St. Patrick's
day theme, Percy Faith will con
duct the Woolworth orchestra
and chorus in "The Irish Wash
erwoman." Harwoods Attend
Sessions of Court
.' Among valley members of
Roxy Ann court, Order of the
Amaranth, who will be in Port
land for grand court sessions of
e lodge today and tomorrow
will be Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Har
wood. Mr. Harwood is associate
patron. They left Thursday by
plane.
; The Harwoods will extend
their visit to Sunday evening
and will be guests while in Port--land
of their son-in-law and
daughter, Lt. Col. and Mrs. J. H.
Nielsen, former Medford resi
dents, and with the Nielsen's
sons, George and Thomas.
Half-Size Fashion
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Pattern 9218: Half sizes 14V4,
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Size 161 2 dress takes 3?s
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This easy-to-use pattern gives
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sew chart shows ygu evry step,
sew chart shows you every step,
coins for this pattern add 5
cents for ach pattern for lst
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18th St., New York 11, N. Y.
Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS,
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o
SI I m "V Q 7
Society and Clubs
New Homemakers' Classes
At YMCA To Begin March 13
New daytime classes for home
makers of the Rogue valley
area have just been announced
by the Medford YMCA. These
classes, to start Tuesday, March
13, are the second of the Home
maker's Holiday series, which
run each Tuesday and Thursday
for a month.
The series will include a
"charm school" with instructors
in skin care, posture, hair style,
wardrobe, and hostess "know
how." It will convene at 10 a.m.
and last two hours at each of
its eight sessions. The instruc
tors include Mrs. Helen Carril
lon, Mrs. Frank Hopewell, Mrs.
Jean Hart, Mrs. Mildred Moss,
Glenn Funk, Mrs. Joanne Weath
erford, Mrs.Kenneth Korby and
Mrs. Richard Lamb.
Beginner's swimming will be
a 10 to 11 a.m. class, with Mrs.
L. L. Tweedy as the instructor.
The class will be for those who
do not know how to swim.
The volleyball, calisthenics,
and free swim class instructed
by Donald Day, Y physical di
rector, will again be offered, and
will meet from 10 a.m. to 12
noon.
Because pf the large response
to the evening internatiorial
cookery class now being held,
Mrs. Alex Tummers will offer
Council of Blind
To Plan for Week
First plans for the annual
White Cane week will be made
at the monthly meeting of Jack
son County chapter, Associated
Council of the Blind, Sunday,
March 11. It will be held at
2 p.m. in St. Mark's Episcopal
Guild hall, corner of Fifth
street and Oakdale avenue.
Members attending are asked
to take a guest, and each mem
ber is also asked to memorize
the words of the hymn, "What A
Friend We Have in Jesus."
It is pointed out that the
Council of the Blind was organ
ized to promote the social and
economic welfare of the blind,
and one of the topics to be dis
cussed Sunday will be projects
which the chapter might under
take and sponsor.
The organization attempts to
educate the general public to
the concept that the blind do
not wish to be an object of pity
or charity, but only an oppor
tunity to be trained to lead pro
ductive and useful lives as any
citizens. This purpose is fur
thered each year by White Cane
week.
Around Hollywood
Hollywood tU.R) A pretty
brunette will make her acting
debut Monday night in the most
startling way
in the atrical
history as a
woman who
has a caesar
ean birth on
TV's "Medic."
Barbara
Turner, a 22
year - old stu
dent from the
famed Actors' Alme Mosby
Studio in New York, faced the
cameras for the first time in a
story that will stir up attention.
"Medic" cast her as a young
mother who must have her baby
by caesarean section.
For the first time on TV, the
birth of a baby will be shown.
And, also for the first time on
TV, a caesarean operation will
be seen, uncensored, from begin
ning to end.
Face Concealed
"The face of the patient isn't
shown as the operation is sup
posed to be "Barbara's," explain
ed "Medic" producer Frank La
Tourette. "The woman gave her
permission. She told us she and
her husband will watch the pro
gram at home."
The three doctors assigned to
be technical advisers for the
birth program lined up six pros
pective caesarean operations for
the producer. Four mothers re
fused to be filmed. One had to
have an emergency operation
and couldn't wait for the camera.
The sixth "finally gave us per
mission." At a preview of the show I
found the operation fascinating
and, at first, a shocker. "Medic's"
first program when the serias
was launched -in 1954 featured
the firth of a baby. All that was
shown was the snipping of the
umbilical cord but at that time
the program was considered dar
ing. "People fainted at the pre
view of that show," producer
LaTourette recalled. "I never
throught we'd get an actual
birth on the air. We wanted to
show actual operations, but the
network and even doctors were
against it.
"Finally we tried one opera
tion. Viewers loved it. The reac
tion convinced doctors and the
network that people want to see
operations. So we have a rule
now our camera doesn't go in
to surgery without filming the
actual operation. People feel
Friday, March 9, 1956
a morning class, running on
Tuesdays and Wednesdays from
10 to 12 noon. The foods dis-
' cussed will be substantially the
same as those in the present eve
ning class, it is stated.
Tuesday and Thursday after
noons from 1 to 3 p.m. starting
March 13, instructors in the
fields of landscape design, soil
preparation and fertilizing, orn
amental and flowering shrubs,
perennials, insect control, roses,
iris, and flower arranging will
conduct a home gardeners' work
shop. Area people called upon
to lead the workshop include
C. B. Cordy, Mrs. Fred Lorish,
Mrs. Bert Elliott and Mr. and
Mrs. L. G. Gentner, Medford,
Lewis Blyth and Mrs. Leonard
McKee of Jacksonville, and
Glen Brown of Ashland.
Tod Tibbutt and Jerry Olson
will act as co-instructors for a
class in tennis on Tuesday and
Thursday afternoons from 2 to
3 p.m. Because an indoor area
will be used, instructors will
concentrate on developing stroke
and serve, together with other
basic tennis techniques.
A craft workshop will be con
ducted by Mrs. Edgar Sims from
1 to 3 p.m. The instruction will
cover work in textile painting,
copper tooling, fiber flower mak
ing and copper enameling.
Intermediate Swimming, with
additional gym work, will be
offered for all those who have
taken beginners' swimming or
who know how to swim and
want refresher instruction to
help them become more pro
ficient swimmers before summer
arrives. Donald Day will also
instruct this class.
Homemakers with habit-trained
pre-schoolers are reminded
by the Y of the available nurs
ery school facilities, according
to the Y office. Hours of the
school are the same as Y classes,
10 to 12 noon and 1 to 3 p.m.,
and that supervision of the
school is in the hands of trained
teachers, Mrs. Robert Newland
for the morning session and Mrs.
Richard Lamb in the afternoon.
Fees for the school are grad
uated to help the mother of
several pre-schoolers.
The Y reserves the right to
close a class where enrollment
has reached a pre-determined
number or to cancel a class be
cause of insufficient enrollment,
according to Mrs. Stanley Ber
ger, women's program director
at the Y. "We urge the women
interested in joining a class to
call the Y and register befora
Tuesday, March 13," she stated
The Y phone is 2-6295.
By ALINE MOSBY
United Presi Correspondent
they're cheated if you just show
the nurses' faces. After ali,
"Climax" or any dramatic show
does that. People lose faith in
our program if we don't show
more."
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 B
a.m. of the day of publication and
for week day news is 5 p.m. the
day before publication.
Friday
6:30 p.m. Shipmates class,
First Methodist church, ,at
church.
7 p.m. Washington PTA
carnival, at school.
7:30 p.m. Junior Service
league, fashion show, Rogue
Valley Country club.
Saturday
10 a.m. Junior Degree of
Honor club, Lincoln gymnasium.
2 p.m. College Women's club
of Rogue River .Valley, Mrs. Er
nest Gilstrap, 35 Geneva ave.
Customers Given
Treat by Clerk
New York (U.R) A 60
year old liquor store clerk de
cided to "treat people' good"
Thursday and it cost his boss
an estimated $1,000.
The clerk, John Closhesey,
said he "got a message from God
to treat people good" and de
cided on the way to distribute
goodness when the first customer
arrived after he opened the
store.
He told the customer "to pay
what he wants or pay nothing.
That was how I treated people
good."
It wasn't very long before the
word got around and the store
was crowded with voluntary
recipients of Closhesey's good.
By the time police noticed the
crowd and investigated, the
shelves were all but stripped of
about $1,000 worth of whiskey.
The cash register contained
$17.46. - I
Victor Cardillo, 40, who owns j
the store- said he would not try
to prosecute Closhesey, who was
taken to a hospital for observa
tion. "The guy is sick," Cardillo
said. "He's just good natured."
Cheer Up Chores!
Strike a colorful note! One-a-day
motifs are easy to embroider
on kitchen towels! They're pretty
shower gifts, bazaar finds, too.
Fun to embroider and display!
Pattern 7311 has seven transfers
a different one for every day.
Each design is about 5x7 inches.
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 Chelsea
Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print
plainly NAME, ADDRESS and
PATTERN NUMBER.
Order our ALICE BROOKS
Needlecraft Catalogue. Enjoy
pages and pages of exciting new
designs knitting, crochet, em
broidery, iron-ons, toys and nov
elties! Send 25 cents for your
copy of this wonderful book now.
You'll want to order every de
sign in it!
Two Children Guests
At Birthday Party
On Sunday Afternoon
Birthdays of Connie Jane Rus
sel, 7, and Lee Pursel, 2, were
observed ' last Sunday afternoon
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Simcox on Ivy street. Fam
ily members attended and re
freshments were served.
Connie Jane .Russell, whose
birthday is March 6, is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam S. Russell, 1080 Stewart
avenue, and Lee Pursel, whose
birthday is March 3, is a son
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lee
Pursel, 204 Bliss street.
Pocahontas io Hold
Meeting, Card Party
Weatonka council, Degree of
Pocahontas, will hold a business
session tonight at 7:30 p.m. at
Redman hall. A card party will
follow, and those wishing to play
cards are asked to be at the
hall at 8:15 p.m. Everyone is in
vited to attend.
-In Medford It's Modern-
...at Modern
its our...
COME IN AND SEE US ... ENJOY
am
SATURDAY,
131 South
Phone
Heads of Groups
Invited to Hear
Noted Man Speak
Presidents of Jackson county
organizations and many others
are being invited to attend the
annual meeting of Jackson
County Public Health associa
tion next week in order that
they may hear Dr. H. Corwin
Hinshaw. The annual meeting
is set for Thursday, March 15,
at 12 noon in the Pioneer room
of the Jackson hotel.
"We feel that we are so fortun
ate in securing a speaker of Dr.
Hinshaw's reputation for our an
nual meeting that we have pre
pared letters inviting all heads
of organizations in Jackson
county to attend," states Mrs.
Allan Perry, vice-president of
the association. "We have writ
ten to all the personnel .man
agers of the local industrial
plants, as we know that Dr.
Hinshaw's speech . will cover
many phases of maintaining
health as it pertains to industry."
"People who have evinced in
terest in public health work
have been invited. We are hop
ing that all members of the gen
eral public who would like to
hear Dr. Hinshaw speak, will
avail themselves of this oppor
tunity." Dr. Hinshaw, clinical profes
sor of medicine at Stanford Uni
versity School of Medicine, . is
head of the San Francisco divis
ion of Diseases of the Chest. For
16 years he was associated with
the Mayo clinic, first as a fellow
in medicine and then as consult
ing physician and head of a sec
tion in medicine.
Reservations for the luncheon
may be made by calling Mrs.
Richard Knight, 3-3298; Mrs. L.
C. Burke, 2-8143 or Mrs. S. L.
Gilbert, 8-1863. Anyone unable
to attend the luncheon, but who
would like to hear the program,
is invited to come at 12:30 p.m.
when the program will start.
Retired Teachers
To Hear Report
Jackson County unit, Oregon
Retired Teachers' association,
will meet Monday, March 13, at
the home of Mrs. A. J. Murray,
1709 Lenora drive, at 1:30 p.m.
Mrs. Ivah Murray will report
on a meeting of the representa
tives council, a preliminary to
the convention of the. Oregon
Education association, to be held
March 15. A social hour will
follow, with entertainment and
a tea in charge of Mrs. Harris
Janes.
All ex-techers are invited to
attend.
4 .
Active Club Endorses
'Great Decisions' Plan
The Medford Active club this
week endorsed the "Great Decis
ions" world affairs study pro
gram of which city councilman
Donald Hansen is chairman.
Club members a g r ee d ' to
actively participate in the pro
gram during the eight weeks the
discussion program will be held
starting later this month. The
program includes discussion of
weekly topics relating to world
affairs.
Cotton can be spun so fine
that one pound of it can be
transformed into 250 miles of
yarn
and it's YOU
who have made it
a success!
hors d'oeuvres
and
Coffee
MARCH 10TH
Central Ave.
3-5379.
Many Housewives, Students
Visit Europe; Advice Given
New York Next to house
wives, the most numerous group
of Americans going abroad this
year will be students. About
33,000 went last year that num
ber is expected to increase in
1956, with the largest group
bound for Europe during the
summer months, says American
Express.
What countries will these stu
dents visit, how much will they
spend, what will they like, and
what, if anything, "will they
complain about?
Some 5500 European-bound
students queried - by the Coun
cil on Student Travel not so long
ago revealed that the largest
portion of students, some 90 per
cent, visited France. Germany
and Austria ranked next, with
the British Isles running close
behind. Seventy per cent spent
less than $1,100 during the sum-,
mer's trip and almost all of them
"had a wonderful time."
Five per cent, however, com
plained about the plumbing, and
another four per cent about the
weather. But next to the fact
that they couldn't speak the
language, the highest percent
age of students regretted bring
ing the wrong sort of clothes.
And most of these were young
women.
On this matter, American Ex
press, which has advised on
various aspects of travel for
over fifty years now, .emphasizes
traveling light. Whether you're
ship-bound or plane-bound and
whether or not you're traveling
on a budget, which most college
girls are, it's best not to load
yourselves with heavy suitcases.
Gone are the days of "dressing
to the hilt," as true in Europe
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Now' j the time to bring your
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as it is in the United States,
says American . Express. . The
casual air so popular now in
cities throughout America is the
style for Americans in Europe as
well, and a college girl planning
a trip abroad this summer can
very likely get by without buy
ing anything new. Naturally, the
most important consideration is
being sure the clothes you take
will be "suitable wherever you
are and whatever you do.
Here's what American Express
suggests a young girl should
carry for'a summer's trip abroad.
Three dark dresses of the new,
easy - to - pack - and - wash, non
wrinkable fabrics, two cocktail
dresses, a light suit and two
matching blouses, also washable;
a lightweight coat' that can dou
ble for a raincoat and bathrobe
as well as for walking that long
distance from your hotel or pen
sion room to the nearest shower;
a cardigan sweater and a pair, of
pedal-pushers, Bermuda shorts or
slacks; a bathing suit, three pairs
of shoes, one "loafer" type for
sightseeing and two pairs of
heels, one medium and one high
and all three comfortable; eight
pairs of nylon hose, several
pairs of foot-peds;. a silk scarf
for evening breezes, a -soft hat,
or make your scarf do double
duty for head covering, required
in most of Europe's churches . .
a pair of dark, washable gloves
. . . and, of course, ample nylon
lingerie and nightwear.
Be sure to pack sun glasses,
band-aids, shampoo, hairpins and
such, says American Express.
You can buy them abroad but
they'll cost you more. If you
need glasses for reading, carry
the prescription .
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Demonstration
Marks Meeting
Of Herb Society .
Eagle Point Rogue Valley
Herb society held the last meet
ing at the home of Mrs. Augusta
Perry in Eagle Point.
Mrs. John Hoist, Gold Hill,
vice-president, conducted the
meeting. Mrs. Otto Nagel, Eagle
Point, president of the society,
was in Eugene with Mr. Nagel
who recently underwent sur
gery in Sacred Heart hospital
there.
Roll call was answered by
naming an herb used in desserts.
An interesting salad bowl ar
rangement was made by Mrs.
Edgar Vanderlip, Shady Cove,
and another herb arrangement
was by Mrs. Orvil Henderson.
A demonstration entitled
"Let's Taste It" was given by
Mrs. Vanderlip and Mrs. M.
Heckenberger. Herbs ' used in
salads, sandwiches, rolls and
cookies were named. At the
close of the meeting tea was
served and members sampled
the products from the demon
stration, along with a birthday
cake made by Mrs. Vanderlip
for Mrs. Heckenberger, . who
celebrated her birthday that
day..
Mrs. Roscoe Larson, Medford,
attended the meeting with Mrs.
Carson as a guest, but became
a member during the meeting.
Next meeting of the society
will be at the apartment of
Mrs. Carson in Medford March
27.
FAST
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Medford, Oregon
. .
Beautiful Prints
O Later the
I SAME DAY
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