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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 27, 1957)
9 ".JQCHT MTOFORD (OREGON) Benefit Event Raises Money For Heart Fund 7 sum of $142 was raised Sitt the Heart fund campaign t a benefit party given last urday evening at Camp White three duplicate bridge clubs, t -. Medford, Camp White and Riverside clubs. Vhe benefit event is given yearly by the three clubs as part of a national plan sponsored by th American Contract Bridge league. Various agencies have been benefited by the parties in q the past. Don Reverman, general chair e man, was assisted by Mrs. W. W. Stevenson, Mrs. Roy Pruitt, Mrs. Jack Mitchell, Mrs. Clifford Howard and Jack Love. In addition to rubber bridge. canasta and other games, 13 taftes of duplicate bridge were Payed. North-south winners were Mrs. George Rode and Mrs. Al Gil- housen, first, 16714 points: Mrs. Frank Baker and Mr. Rode. second, 158 V points; Mrs. Lltfyd Johnson and Mrs. Paul McDuf 4ee. third. 157: Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Randall, fourth, 153'2. East-west winners were Wat ter Grow and Asa Kimball, first, 163 points; Mrs. William Isaacs and Mrs. Alto Pruitt, second, 148'i; the Jack Loves, third, 147: Mrs. Roy Pruitt and Mrs, E. L. Miller, fourth, 142 points, blaster points were awarded. r-A number of prizes were awarded for other games, and at the close of the party, refresh ments were served. "Danger Zones'7 Topic for Club Archduke Otto of Austria, who is to speak Monday, March 4, for Rojue Valley Knife and Fork club, will present his idea on how democracy can be pre served. "World Danger Zones" is the topic of his address. Just before coming to the United States this winter, the archduRe attended a conference of. parliamentary and press lead ers in Satander, Spain. The group discussed the movement for a United States of Europe. Reservations for the dinner meeting are to be sent to the club secretary, Mrs. J. S. Heath erington, 12 Black Ook drive, no later than Saturday, March 2. Day Planned ; By Upper Rogue HEC work day in preparation for a rummage sale is being plan ned by members of Uppe Rogue Home Economics club for Fri day, March 1, at 11 a.m. at the Grange hall. Membersare ask ed to take a sack lunch; coffee and a salad will be furnished. Rummage is,to be taken to the hall to be sorted and priced. A potluek supper will be held at the Grange hall Thursday, March 7, at 7 p.m. Members are asked to take two dishes of food. ,Rates are up but Allstate still offers m ma e IIstate'ratar lo wer than those of most other companies! Those savings are made possible by Allstate 's lower selling costs, up-to-the-minute office ? Wftthods and a modern system for rating use of cars. Al state's protection is finest! Allstate has an out 6 standing reputation for reliable protection, depend- tble service and fast, fair claim settlements. Last year Allstate paid over $125,000,000 in claims to protect its policyholders. Proof that, whatever happens, you're in good hands with Allstate! Sea how much you con save the Allstate way! Phone of visit your Allstate Agent today. DOUGLAS H. HINESLY- 40 South Central, Medford, You're to good IMSUttANCS TOCK COMPANY PROTECTION f 4d kf Start Assets n4 liabilities distinct and Mrarats front tn 0-nt. Sews, Roooucfc and Co. Horn Otttc Soiu. Mines. MAIL TRIBUNE Society (Continued from Page 2) Smart Sun-Styled! You're so smart to sew these new fashions now for sunny summer days! Carefree T-shirt with a clever convertible neck line slim, trim shorts below. Perfect in gay striped denim, poplin, pique or use no-iron seersucker for shortie pajama versions! Pattern 9223: Misses' sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 shirt, 2 yards 35-inch; shorts, IVi 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 mailing. Send to Marian Mar tin, care of Medford Mail Trib une, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Coffee Announced By Gold Hill PTA Gold Hill Gold Hill Parent Teacher association will sponsor a coffee to raise funds for this year's budget. The coffee will be held Friday, March 1 from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Paul Molloy on Second avenue in Gold Hill. Everyone is welcome. and JOHN J. FRANTZ Oregon Phone 3-4722 hands with ; s COMPANY ljjjQ 9223 IfW 10-11 Wednesday, February 27, 1957 Camp Fire To Observe Birthday Eagle Point Plans were completed at the February meet ing of Eagle Point Camp Fire Leaders-Sponsors association, for the annual Camp Fire birthday anniversary observance. The month of March commemorates the founding of the organization 47 years ago. "Together We Make Tomor row" is the Camp Fire Girls birthday project for the year, and around this theme the pro gram has been planned. The Bluebird girls, in groupes. led by Mrs. Arnold Arens. Mrs. Elbert Hefley, Mrs. Gordon Stan ley, Mrs. Walter Lee and Mrs. G'enn Burrill, will depict ways of the past. Mrs. Dale Acker man's Camp Fire Girls will pre sent the program of the present time, and the Camp Fire Girls from Mrs. LeRoy Bedingfield's group will portray a page from the future. , Mrs. Ed Gray, of the district program committee, suggested that girls interested in the Hori zon club could make name tags for guests attending the Birth day program. It will be held March 1, Friday, at 7:30 p.m. in the Eagle Point school cafe teria. All adults connected with the Camp Fire organization, sponsors, leaders, parents, and immediate families of registered girls are invited. Mrs. Frank Christian, Talent, president of the Rogue council of Camp Fire Girls, was a guest and gave report on the-Horizon club conference to be held March 30 in Klamath Falls Horizon club is coordinated to the inter ests of girls high school age. The conference will cover a variety of career workshops and the day will end with a mixed party. Mrs. Ruthe'Gerety, executive director for the Rogue area coun cil, gave Bluebird leaders in structions for making hand pup pets and showed a sample that her group had made. She noted the unlimited possibilities for imaginative play in puppetry. Samples of rythm band in struments were shown which could be made from simple things found around the home. Some instruments were left as models for leaders to work from. Mrs. Christian announced a leaders workshop would be held at the YMCA in Medford, March 18 at 7:30 p.m. Leaders from throughout the council will at tend. A great variety of crafts, projects and ideas will be dis played and demonstrated. A sample of the canned salted peanuts which will be sold as well as candy during the April sale, was shown. All leaders were instructed to remind their girls that unless they have paid their annual dues and are registered, they cannot take part in the sale. The merits of good window displays during Birthday week were discussed, and plans were made to set up displays in local business windows. Anyone interested in taking the leaders training course, or girls wishing to have information about the Horizon club confer ence may call Mrs. Merle Mc- Graw VA 6-3714 Relatives Leave After Visit Here Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Whipple of Victoria, B. C, left for then home yesterday after having been guests here of Mr. Whip ple's cousin, Mrs. B. L. Sander son, and Mr. Sanderson, 940 South Grape street " The Whipples spent the past two months in southern Cali fornia and traveling in Mexico. While in California they made colored pictures of relatives and their homes, and these were shown at a gathering of Oregon members of the family Sunday at the Sandersons. Attending were Mrs. Sander son's brother and sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Victor York and sons, Victor Jr., and a sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. James Arnold, Butte Falls. Women Students Give One-Act Play Miss Marcia Houghton and Miss Nancy Jennings were among six Southern Oregon col lege students who presented a one-act play for Bellview grange last week. . The play, entitled "Stuffed Owls" is a satire on women's club activities. The six women in the cast are all members of Sigma Tau and SOC players at the college. Miss Houghton, a daughter of Mr.' and Mrs. Dwight Houghton, 512 Dakota avenue, is a senior in elementary education. Miss Jennings, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. George C. Jennings, 218 Saginaw drive, is also a senior in education. Dance at Y A square dance will be held at the Medford YMCA Thursday, February ' 28, from 8 to 10:30 p.m. Doug Fosbury and Kenneth Hood will be callers. Women attending are asked to take potluck refreshments. Guests are welcome. The Family Council Editor'! note: The Family Council consists ot a juUce, a psychiatrist, three clergymen, a newspaper editor, a women's editor and two writen. Each article la a summary of an actual report. The Family Council does not give advice; it merely reports on problems that nave been dealt with by responsible agencies and counselors. Mrs. T. L. We don't know what to do for Connie. Connie L. Everything is mis erable at our house. Mrs. T. L. I am the mother of a 16-year-old girl and am having quite a hard time with her. We have three younger children and are not very well off, so we can't do all the things we would like for Connie. I feel Connie is old enough to under stand this, but she doesn't seem able to accept it. ' For example, my sister every year sends Connie a wonderful box of clothing, only slightly worn by her daughters. The dresses are much more beautiful than anything we can buy her, but Connie refuses to wear any of them and once tore up a dress in a temper tantrum. Another thing Connie want ed her own room because she said she can't study with the children bothering her. We par titioned one of the rooms so she could have some privacy, but she complains now that it is just a "cell." We really don't know wnat xo do lor ner. Connie L. Everything is mis erable at our house. Some of my friends are no richer than we are, yet they have nice rooms and homes and are able to wear their own clothes, not castoffs. They also have pocket money for little personal things. My parents don't give me any allowance. They just say, "Tell us what you want and we'll try to get it for you." My mother thinks I'm lucky" to be able to get expensive dresses from my cousins, but they aren't the kind of dresses I like. Nobody in my school wears stuff like that. I didn't ask my parents to par tition a room for me. I came home from school one day and found this "surprise." There is hardly enough room to turn around. My parents call me sel fish and ungrateful, but I don't think I ask for so much. They just don't understand. - The Council: Connie may ap pear to be selfish, ungrateful and spoiled, but she is . really not getting an even break. Her par ents who "don't know what to do for her," are trying to do too much and not giving her the chance to learn how to achieve the things she wants. It is not sufficient to explain to Connie that there is not money enough to get everything she wants. Connie should learn that within certain limitations, she can improve her lot. Most girls resent wearing cast offs. But has it ever occurred to Connie or her mother that a girl can have nice clothese inex pensively by learning to sew? With this skill, Connie may even be able to . alter her, cousins' dresses to a style that suits her. Mr. and Mrs. T.L. thought they were doing a great deal for Connie when they fixed up a separate room for her without her knowledge. But Connie should have been taken in on the plans. She may have had other ideas. If they had encour aged her to think in terms of planning a room for herself and making her own curtains or painting her own furniture, she may have developed an enthus Papers Publish Poem by Student William Russell, junior at Southern Oregon college, has had one of his poems printed in both the Southern Oregon college and Oregon State college newspapers. The poem, entitled "Folly of a Humanity Major", was written by the student in preparation for a poetry contest being sponsored by Lambda Iota Tau. Young Russell, junior In secondary- education", is a membei of Sigma Alpha Sigma, Gamma Theta Upsilon and Future Teachers of America. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs David L. Russell, 1139 West Main street. )idn't Cough ALL NIGHT CREOMULSION BRINGS SPECTACULAR RELIEF Special Formula Creomul sion Cough Syrup for Chil dren relieves coughs due to colds right now, with out narcotics or antihista mines, stops tickle pro motes sleep tastes good too. Get CREOMULSION FOR CHILDREN iasm for turning her "cell" into a gay little room. Connie is old enough to have her own pocket money. If her parents cannot supply her with a small allowance, she should be told that she will have to earn this money herself. Baby sitters are much in demand and Connie, because of her experience with younger sisters and brothers, would make a good one. (Copyright 1957, General Features Corp.) Science Conference Slated at Linfield McMinnville High school students in Oregon and Washing ton who are interested in science have -been invited to Linfield college, McMinnville, March 2, for the seventh annual high school science conference. Be tween 200 and 300 students us ually attend the conference. Students will be taken on a tour of . the different science departments including chemis- Ury, biology, mathematics, phy sics, and , Linfield Research in stitute. Visitors will be introduced to the college science faculty and hear talks by some of them. For the remainder of the conference the students are free to attend open house in any of the dif ferent departments, Linfield Re search institute and the observa tory. DAM WORK STOPPED Olympia (U.R) The Wash ington Senate, in its first eve ning session, last night killed, 27-19, a bill that would have per mitted Tacoma to continue con struction of its dams on the Cowlitz river. Just FOB Js t"1 vyj Milk Glass or Plastic Bases with decorated Parchment Shades. Made of unbreakable Poly ethylene in Red, White, Yellow, Turquoise & Pink. Regular $1.98 Value. Sale Price , USE OUR LAY A WAY PLAN Buy new at these lew prices, and pay later) A small deposit will held your purchase until you're ready to pick it up. Ask any of our clerks about itl STORE HOURS: Daily -9:30 to 5:30 p.m. 39 NORTH CENTRAL MHS Senior Class Tops Collections In TAP Fund Drive The senior class of Medford high school collected $463.02 in the Teens Against Polio drive to lead the three classes at the school, it has been announced by Nancy Adams, county TAP chairman. The drive was a por tion of the county-wide March of Dimes campaign in January ', The junior class collected $370.96 and the sophomore class, ! last year's winner, reported $64, 41. The Medford high school to- . tal was $949.43. . - I The senior class is winner of the Harry Chipman award, which goes annually to the class reporting the most revenue. Seven projects were used by the seniors to raise money. They I were a bottle drive, car wash, shoeshine, "lick polio" sucker i sale, record raffle, faculty men j vs. seaior boys basketball game, I and a faculty women vs. senior ; girls volleyball game. The juniors . raised their j money by. a car wash, baked i food sale, toll road and a "pea- ! nuts for polio" sale. The sopho-1 mores used a car wash and shoe 1 shine as their projects. 1 The Latin club raised $23.27 with a raffle and the Order of the M conducted a coin throw at a basketball game which took in $27.77. The student council sponsored an all-school queen contest with each class selecting a candidate. The candidate bringing in the most money was named as queen. She was Suzan Hubbard of the junior class who was crowned "Miss Teens Against Polio" at an after-game dance. Her princesses were Linda Harnsburge, sophomore, and Lois Elkins, senior. Money rais ed in the queen contest was credited to the class which the girl represented. REMNANTS received 1000 yards of Bl 39 BIG VALUE Remnants-PERCALE POPLIN BROADCLOTH PLISSE-DENIM YD. A Real Woolworth Value Boudoir Lamp & Shade $1147 a Reg. $1.98 Value Ladies' NYLONS First quality seamless and full fash ioned styles. Sizes 8'A to 1 1. 2i87c Limit 2 pr. to a customer Rectangular DISH PANS & scoxoxi AVENUE HORSE AND TAILS- Hollywood (U.R) The Wyatt Earp of TV will not go complete ly soft when he sings on a tele vision show next fall. Hugh O'Brian, who plays the televis ion part, will wear white tie and tails for his singing debut but he will go on stage on a horse to pacify his western fans. TT viT J m ill if x x It's true. More and more men who value their appearance are conveniently send ing their shirts to our laundry. Let us finish your shirrs crisp, clean and wrinkle-free . i . with collars and cuffs the way you like them. MIMBf R PHONE 2-6165 for FREE Pickup and Delivery Service DUMAS DOMESTIC LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS "YOUR APPEARANCE IS OUR ElUSINESS" 30 North Riverside Ave. Medford ji m DuPont Cellulose SPONGES IDEAL FOR HOUSE- CLEANING CHORES aVVQ A BIG VALUE J) 16" x 28" Cannon Hand Towels A special lot consisting of solid colors and fancy patterns. Values up to 79c each. 3 fr 97 12" x 12" Cannon Wash Cloths Large assortment of better cloths. Values up to 49c. Sale 2 lor 29 Electric SKILLET Fully automatic. Large size ca pacity.' Complete with General Electric cord. A Special Value Rose Bushes A Big Value package of two only No. 2 Rose Bushes in popular va rieties. Guaranteed to grow. $00 FOR ONLY LISTEN TO THE WOOLWORTH HOUR Every Sunday 1 to 2 fM. - STATION KYJC xim o go a e Boy Scouts Pack 8 Pack 8, Cub Scouts, will hold its annual Blue and Gold Dinner Thursday, Feb. 28, at 6:30 p.m. in the Jackson school gymna- My Boss wears. the WHITEST Shirts of air " . . . they're done ot the laundry! FREE! ; suit Cleaned 6 SHIRTS Laundered If We Miss Button -: . -. : t value Price $J88 a PKG. MEDFORD, OREGON