Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, April 17, 1956, Image 3

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    Siskiyou District Gardeners To Hold
Annual Spring Meeting in Phoenix Hall
Phoenix Garden club will be
hostesi for the annual spring
meeting of the Siskiyou district,
Oregon Federated Garden clubs,
which will, be held Thursday,
April 26 at Phoenix Community
hall in Phoenix. The business
meeting will open at 9:45 a.m.
Presidents and chairmen will
give their semi-annual reports
and conservation essay contest
prizes will be awarded. The
clubs having entries in the con
test are Azalea club of Brook
ings, Shady Cove and Sunny
Valley clubs.
Luncheon will be served by
the Phoenix Grange ladies in
the Grange hall. Reservations
are to be made before noon
Half-Size Fashion
I
i
1 I i
tw I SIZES
Prettiest summer ensemble
designed especially to flatter the
shorter, fuller figure! See those
slimming lines of the dress:
favorite yoke, pockets to detail
th graceful skirt. Cover-up on
cool days with the little bolero.
Pattern 9060: Half Sizes 14V4,
16, 131z, 20, 2212, 24V2.
Siz I8V2 dress takes 4 Va yards.
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 Medford Mail Tribune, Pat
tern Dept., 232 West 18th St.,
New York 11, N.Y. Print plain
ly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
S-0-0 Prelly!
Cool scoped-neck pinafore be
comes a party-pretty dress by
adding the separate collar! She'll
love this versatile new style,
you will to it's sew-very-easy!
Pattern 7186: Children's Sizes
2, 4, 6, 8 included. Pattern, em
broidery transfer, directions.
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for lst
class mailing. Send to Medford
Mail Tribune, Household Arts
Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old Chelsea
Station, New York 11, N.Y.
Print plainlv NAME. ADDRESS
AND PATTERN NUMBER.
Two FREE patterns printed
in the new Alice Brooks Needle
craft book for 1956! Stunning de
signs for yourself, for your home
just for you, our readers! Doz
ens of other designs to order
all fiasv fascinating hand-work!
Send 25 cents for your copy of ;
this wonderful book right away! j
April 23 by phoning Mrs. A. O.
Floyd, district chairman, Med
ford 2-6438. Each club is asked
to send a table favor for each
member attending.
The program will start at 1
p.m. Scheduled to appear are
James O Donahue of Klamath
Falls and Claude Mills of Port
land. Mr. O'Donahue will show
his outstanding collection of col
ored slides of native water fowl.
He will lecture on this subject
telling how he took the pictures
and describing the method used
in obtaining his rare shots.
Mr. Mills is a representative
of the Miller Products and will
show colored slides of spring
bulbs.
Vocal and piano selections
will be given by Mrs. Blanch
Degner of Ten Mile, Ore.
Musicians Plan
Festival Concert
In Portland Soon
Portland Jacob Avshalomov
will lead the 80-piece Portland
Junior Symphony orchestra plus
a 150-voice chorus in a spring
festival concert at the Portland
public auditorium Saturday,
April 21, at 8:30 p.m. The con
cert, which closes the orches
tra's 32nd season, will present
one of the great works in con
temporary choral literature,
Stravinsky's "Symphony of
Psalms," as well as a work from
the classical repertoire, Vivaldi's
"Gloria." Elizabeth Pharris a-id
Bonnie Newburgh will appear
as soloists in the latter.
The orchestral part of the pro
gram will present Handel's "Con
certo Grosso No. 10," and a
rarely heard overture by Verdi,
"King for a Day," in its first
Portland performance. The music
for this work has been sent from
Milan, Italy, for the Junior Sym
phony's performance.
The chorus will be made up
of student groups from Klamath
Falls high school, Willamette
university, Lewis and Clark col
lege, and the University of Port
land. After rehearsing separate
ly at their schools, they will meet
together in Portland for final
joint-rehearsals during the week
preceding the concert.
Also on Saturday, April 21,
the Junior Symphony will per
form another of its auditorium
children's concerts, which begin
Election Planned
By Lone Pine Unit
Lone Pine Election of off i-1
cers will be held at a meeting!
of Lone Pine Home Extension
unit set for Thursday, April 19,
at the home of Mrs. Bud Mitch
ell, 3082 Buckshot Hill road.
Also planned is a plant sale
and members are asked to take
plants for either outdoors or
indoors. Final plans will be made
for participation in the annual j
May festival.
Those attending will make
sample draperies under the di
rection of Mrs. A. E. Sidener
and Mrs. Burle Griffin. Mem
bers are to take one-half yard
of drapery material, 13 inches
of lining material, shears, crino
line 3 inches by 21 inches, thread
to match and contrasting threa,
needles, pins, tapes and ruler.
Mrs. Paul Dalton and Mrs.
William Garner will be co-hostesses
with Mrs. Mitchell. Child
care will be available at the
home of Mrs. Ralph Hutchins.
To Install
Members of Medford Bar
racks, Veterans of World War I,
and the auxiliary will hold joint
installation of officers at 8" p.m.
Wednesday, April 25, in Redman
hall. The date was first erron
eously reported as being April
18.
To Initiate
Initiation will be held at a 1
meeting of Bethel 14, Order of j
Jobs Daughters, to be held Wed-1
nesday, April 18, in Medford Ma
sonic temple. The meeting will
open at 7:30 p.m. and members
are reminded to wear formal
gowns.
4
Royal Neighbors
To Hold Practice
Royal Neighbors of America
will hold a special practice ses
sion Thursday, April 19, at 8 p.m.
in KP hall. The oracle, Mrs.
A. R. Allen, states that all offi
cers are expected to attend the
practice.
About 90 percent of today's
prescriptions are for medicines
that didn't exist 15 years ago.
Quotes From the News
By UNITED PRESS
Washington President Eisenhower on his veto of the farm bill:
"I could not sign this bill into law because it was a bad bill. In
the months ahead, it would hurt more farmers than it would help.
In the long run, it would hurt all farmers." .
Washington Senate Democratic Leader Lyndon B. Johnson,
on the farm bill veto:
"Congress is not going to roll over and play dead at the crack
of a whip."
Nashville, N.C. Rep. Harold Cooley (D.-N.C.) on the farm bill
veto: ,
"Farmers will cast their votes against him (Mr. Eisenhower) in
November."
Rochester, 111. Farmer B. D. Walker on the farm bill veto:
"I don't think he'll be the next president. Small farmers in this
area are in a bad way. Everything else but the farmer has had
help."
Carmel, Ind. Farmer William L. Schwegman on the farm bill
veto:
"I would veto it if I were president, too."
Washington Sen. Allen J. Ellender (D.-La.) on the farm bill
veto:
"The president did not know what was in the bill. He was too
busy playing golf at Augusta."
Oxford, England Constable C. R. Fox on rowdy American
servicemen:
"They are mostly young men who find themselves in an alien
land for the first time in their lives and with more money than
they have been used to handling and an erroneous estimate of their
capacity for English liquor."
Hollywood Actress Joan Manning on being iold she was too
sexy to be a comedienne like her mother. Vera Vague:
"Is there anything wrong about looking like a girl?"
at 11 a.m. The program will in
clude excerpts from the evening
program with explanations of
the tnusic given by Mr. Avshalo
mov. The children's program
lasts for an hour, and is specially
designed as an introduction to
music and concert attendance for
children of grade school ages.
Marine Hearings
Will Be Continued
Parris Island, S.C. (U.R) A
Marine Corps spokesman said
a court of inquiry will not com
plete its investigation of a night
march that cost six lives until
after tomorrow "at the earliest."
The court held today its eighth
consecutive day of hearings into
the allegedly unauthorized
march ordered by SSgt. Mat
thew C. McKeon, 31, of Wor
cester, Mass., more than a week
ago. Six of the recruits on the
march were drowned in a tidal
creek.
Capt. Ralph C. Wood, public
information officer, said there
was "absolutely nothing" to re
lease, about the hearings. Find
ings will be announced later in
Washington, he said.
McKeon, whose platoon of
trainees made the march, has
been since confined to a brig
for his mandatory presence at
Alsop Brothers
Named for Award
Chicago (U.R) Victor Cohn
of the Minneapolis Star and
Tribune will receive Sigma Del
ta Chi's annual Distinguished
Service Award for general re
porting, the professional journ
alism fraternity announced to
day. Cohn, who also won the 1951
award, was included among
award winners in 14 categories
named by Mason R. Smith, na
tional president of the fratern
ity. The annual awards, based on
work done in 1955, were confer
red for the 24th year.
Other winners included:
Joseph and Stewart Alsop,
New York Herald Tribune Syn
dicate, for Washington corres
pondence. Winners will receive their
awards May 15 at the fraternity's
annual banquet in Chicago.
Tuesday, April 17, 1958
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
Soviet Police Ask
Tighter Security
London (U.R) Visiting Soviet
police have asked Britain to is
sue "shoot to kill" orders in
event of any threat to Nikita
S. Krushchev and Nikolai Bul
ganin on their visit here, it was
reported today.
There was no confirmation or
denial of the request from offi
cial sources but a sudden wave
of anti-Russian incidents made
the report seem likely. British
police traditionally are unarm
ed, but can carry pistols on cer
tain assignments.
British; police combed lists of
known anti-Communist fanatics
today in a grim effort to nip
any assassination attempts
against the Russian Communist
Party chief and premier. They
arrive by ship Wednesday.
Scotland Yard received assur
ances from leaders of 250,000 j
Iron Curtain refugees in Britain ;
there would be no violence. !
But it is the small percentage j
of extreme fanatics that has ;
made both Britain and Russian
officials clamp on the tightest ;
security regulations in the is
land's history.
Officials voiced frank alarm 1
at an attempt to burn down the
Soviet Tass News Agency offices j
in Fleet st. and the paint spat- j
tering of the new Karl Marx
monument in Highgate Cemetery :
Sunday night.
EXPENSIVE LIPSTICK
Munich, Germany (U.R) Pol
ish women pay $40 for a lipstick
imported from the West, accord
ing to a refugee druggist. The
druggist told Radio Free Europe
that Polish-made lipsticks cost
$1.40 but are of such poor quali
ty that nobody wants them.
Dead line for Sunday Classified Is
at noon Saturday.
Egyptian farmers place fish in . the fields eating insects and
weeds. Waste material from the
fish fertilize the soil.
the water covering their rice
crops. The fish swim through
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