Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, May 06, 1957, Image 2

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    TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Monday. May 8, 19S7
Guest Players
Attend Session
Of Bridge Club
Two guest playen were
among those attending the Wed
nesday evening session of the
Riverside Bridge club last week.
They were Mrs. George Choate
of Eugene and Mrs. Harry Nord
wick of Medford.
Top honors in the north
south postiion went to Mrs. J. J.
Beaman and Al Gilhousen with
103V4 points while in the east
west position Mrs. H. J. Boyd
and Mrs. Richard Milestone
with 106 Vi points were high.
Other players and their scores
in the north-south position were
Mrs. F. R. Baker and Paul Hat
ton, 103; Mrs. Thomas Randal
and Berg Marten, 100; and Dr.
and Mrs. George B. Dean, 97'4.
East-west position players and
points were Mrs. George Choate
and Mrs. George Rode, 96; Mrs.
Dwight Seely and Mrs. B. L.
Sanderson, 91; and Mrs. Fred
Purdin and Mrs. Harry Nord
wick, 90.
4
Meeting Announced
For Mistletoe Club
Mistletoe club' will meet on
Wednesday. May 8, at the home
of Mrs. Frank Hussong on
Bameburg road, at 10:30 a.m.
The planting to attend are
asked to take a sack lunch
Work during the day will be
on rummage sale items.
Pencil leads are now made in
19 degrees of hardness. The
toughest, is a lead that will take
a needle point, used by engrav
ers and stone cutters.
Weekend Planned
To Honor Mothers
Ashland The annual Moth
er's week end at Southern Ore
gon college begins on Friday,
May 10, with the SOC Player's
production of "Alladin and His
Wonderful Lamp." Sponsored
by the Associated Women Stu
dents under the chairmanship of
Miss Marilyn Bailey, Medford,
this event is held each year at
the college to honor mothers of
students on the weekend of
their day. A leisurely schedule
of events has been planned for
the week end, featuring an open
house, luncheon, Mothers' club
meeting and a coffee hour.
The luncheon, central event of
the program, will be held at
12:30 p.m. on Saturday at Lin
coln school under the direction
of Miss Marjo Murray, Medford
sophomore. The program will
include announcements of spe
cial awards and honors, and in
stallation of officers for the As
sociated Women Students. Dr.
Roy McNeal will give the ad
dress following greetings to the
mothers by Dr. Elmo Stevenson,
president of the college. Chair
man of the program is Miss
Melba Snow, with reservations
for the luncheon being ar
ranged by Miss Barbara Wright
f-
Medford Student
Weaves May Pole
Miss Janet Jamison and Miss
Janet Perry, Medford, were two
of the freshmen women selected
to weave the traditional May
Pole at Willamette university's
coronation ceremonies this week
end. The coronation festivities
highlighted the 51st annual May
week end at Willamette.
Miss Jamison, a music educa
tion major at the university and
a member of Pi Beta Phi is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.
Jamison. A pre-nursing major.
Miss Perry is also a member of
Pi Beta Phi and is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Allan F. Perry.
Meeting Announced
For Parents Unit
Medford Parents Home Exten
sion unit will meet Tuesday,
May 7, at 7:30 p.m. at the home
of Mrs. L. Johnson, 1109 Win
chester avenue. Project for the
evening will be "Window Treat
ments." Mrs. Robert Billingsley
and Mrs. L. E. McConnel will be
leaders. '
Hostesses for the evening will
be Mrs. Eugene Brooks and Mrs.
L. Hayes.
Anyone interested in home ex
tension is invited. Those wishing
transportation are to call Mrs.
William Jensen, SP 2-4690.
Roxy Ann Club
To Hear Program
By Paul Olsen
Paul Olsen will lecture on
fossils at the Wednesday, May
8, meeting of Roxy Ann Gem
and Mineral club at Redman
hall, Fourth and Apple streets.
Members are asked to take fos
sils to the meeting which will
start at 7:30 p.m.
Dwight McCorkle and T. J.
Riley will report on the display
which won a trophy for the
club at Eugene. The display
will be shown at the meeting.
The display which has been
at the United States National
bank for the past month which
belonged to John Ross has been
replaced with a mineral collec
tion of Laurence Burnette of
Talent.
Eagle Point Unit
To Hold Meeting
Eagle Point Eagle Point
Home Extension unit will meet
in the home of Mrs. Lyle Green
wood, Brophy road, Box 652,
Thursday, May 9, at 10:30 a.m.
The project lesson on reuphols-
tering of kitchen and dining
chairs will be given by Mrs. Vic
tor Hay and Mrs. John Ouster
hout.
The pew officers were install
ed at a joint ceremony held for
all units at the home extension
festival May 1 in Central Point.
They are Mrs. Glenn Clymer,
chairman; Mrs. Wallace Pianka,
vice-chairman; Mrs. Larry Wil
son, secretary; Mrs. Ben Hefley,
treasurer.
Members attending Thursday's
meeting are asked to take table
service and the gold medal cou
pons which they have saved. It
is stressed that child care will
not be available at the home of
Mrs. Edna Cunningham as usual,
and that members needing this
service are to call Mrs. Don Ash
pole, HI 6-3302.
Meetings Planned
By PEO Chapters
Two chapters of the PEO sis
terhood will hold meetings this
week.
A luncheon meeting will be
held by Chapter AA of the sis
terhood at the home of Mrs.
Grace Collins, 1810 East Main
street Wednesday, May 8, at
12:30 p.m.
Mn. E. B. DeVoe and Mrs. O.
Gordon Hudson will assist Mrs.
Collins.
Chapter BE will meet Tues
day, May 7, at 8 p.m., at the
home of Mrs. Orel A. Welsh,
1300 East Main street. Mrs. C.
Mitchell is assisting hostess.
Mrs. Allan F. Perry is in charge
of the program.
'-.
Syracuse University has been
competing in intercollegiate
wrestling since 1922.
SACRIFICE!
Rug & Linoleum Prices
SEE TUESDAY'S AD
Laurine's Carpet House
400 E. Main Phone SP 3-5182
Shower Is Given
For Newlyweds
Shady Cove-Trail Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Esten, who were
married April 18 in Reno, Nev.,
were honored at a large shower
party April 27 at Upper Rogue
Grange hall. Hostesses were
Mesdames Oscar Hanson, Mor
ris Bush and Ted Shimek of
Elk Creek; Mrs. Carl Richard
son, Mrs. Ranald Axtell of
Trail and Mrs. Kenneth Lacy
and Mrs. Charles Jantzer of
Central Point. Over 100 guests
attended.
Mrs. Richardson and Mrs.
Jantzer decorated the hall and
tables and a wedding cake was
made and decorated by Kenneth
Lacy.
Square dancing was enjoyed,
with Benton Boyce of Central
Point calling. Gifts were opened
during the refreshment hour.
Mrs. Esten is the former Mrs.
Audrey Collier and has lived in
Jackson county many years.
Mr. Esten came to the Rogue
valley from California in 1945
The newlyweds made a wedding
trip to Lake Tahoe and south
em California.
Among the guests were the
bride's mother, Mrs." Cora Train
of Shady Cove; her father, Orin
Train of Trail; her brother and
sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Bur
ton Train of Roseburg; an uncle
and aunt. Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hall of Shady Cove, and her
son, Ben Collier,, who has just
been released from Army ser
vice after 16 months' in Ger
many.
-
Dolores Zeleznik
Heads Committee
Marylhurst Miss Dolores Ze
leznik, junior from Medford, was
chairman of registration for a
regional meeting of the National
Students association held at
Marylhurst college May 4 and 5
The meeting included delegates
from the 13 member colleges and
universities, as well as repre
sentatives of non-member insti
tutions. -
Besides Marylhurst college and
the University of Portland,
which were co-hosts for the con
ference, the member institutions
in Oregon are Portland State
college, Reed college, and South
ern Oregon college.
The Universities of Washing
ton, Idaho, Alaska, Washington
State college, Seattle Pacific, and
Eastern and Central Washington
Colleges of Education complete
the roster.
CALENDAR
Calendar notice and nawi for
th mociety aection of The Mail
Tribuna must ba aubmittad in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition la 1 p.m Friday Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 9
vm of the day of oublication and
for week day new ia pjn. the
day. before publication.
Monday:
1230 p.m. Reames Past Ma
trons -club, Medford' Masonic
temple.
8 p.m. Rebekah lodge, Odd
Fellows hall. -
8 p.m. VFW auxiliary, dance
at Camp White theatre.
Tuesday:
10 a.m. Rogue Valley Navy
Mothers club, home of Mrs. John
Davies, 1220 Maple Park dr.
10:30 a.m. Reese Creek Ex
tension unit, home of Mrs. Joe
Whipple, Delta Wateri rd., Med
ford.
1 p.m. Central Point Royal
Neighbors, home of Mrs. D. R-
608 EAST MAIN Specials Good Tues. & Wed. PHONE SP 2-6805
EASTS BHi
IT
Join the many happy peo
ple at the East Side Market
by taking home absoluely
FREE $10 Worth of Fine
Merchandise! Nothing to
buy, just come in and check
our Lucky License Num
bers. Is Your Number Here?
-J 5226 8A 244
7A-154 -K1168
8-3322 4L690-
1D967- 5G731-
-L7990 -D5158
-D8098 5J 500-
6H959- -D8132
-B5019 -B1730
Dashes ( ) Indicate Missing Digit
Please Come In and
Get Your Groceries!
25'...
SPECIALS
n
SEA BASS
FRESH FILET
CANTALOUPE
Large, Fresh, yffic
FROZEN PEAS
Birdseye, ) Ec
2 Pkgs. Ld)
FROZEN LEMONADE
Minute Maid, f fC
6-oz. Uvy can
FREE DELIVERY Any Place in Town
On Orders $3.00 or Over
Scientist Predicts
Big Missile Airliner
2 Generations Away
By GLENN STACKHOUSE
United Press Correspondent
Sunnyvale, Calif. U.R) Dr.
Louis N. Ridenour, former chief
scientist for the U.S." Air Force,
predicted today that an 8,000-
mile-an-hour guided missile air
liner is only two aircraft "gen
erations" away.
Within 30 to 40 years, he said,
airliners will evolve into mam
moth missiles, dwarfing today's
piston-engine contraptions, that
will rocket through the exos
phere 600 to 700 miles above the
earth to carry passengers on in
tercontinental business and pleas
ure trips.
The scientist, known as the
"father" of the Air Research and
Development Command, is direc
tor of the research and develop
ment branch of Lockheed Air
craft's missile division here.
The company's huge X-17 re
search missile was reported re
cently to have flown some 9,000
miles an hour in a test flight
off Florida.
In an exclusive interview with
United Press, Ridenour said he
foresaw only two more "genera
tions" of commercial aircraft
ahead of the missile liner.
On Threshold
"'We are already on the
threshold, of the first of these
generations," he said. "This is
the turbojet and turboprop, era,
to be introduced within the next
year by the advent of such
planes as the Boeing 707, the
Douglas DC-8 and the Turboprop
Lockheed Electra.
The scientist said the time lag
between aircraft generations
would be dictated "less by tech
nicians than by economics."
"The economic fact is that the
Hendrickson on Merriman rd.,
Central Point.
1 p.m. ' Ladyi Elks, Elks
temple.
1:30 p.m. Medford chapter
of the Gold Star Mothers, home
of Mrs. Clyde Sturgill, Hillcrest
Orchards.
Smart Hobby!
MANAMA
lWIW M ftiy ,;v j
Add bright color to clothing
and household accessories! The
newest huck designs are here
quick, fascinating to do!
Swedish weaving is today's
most popular, hobby! Pattern
7202 contains chart for four dif
ferent huck designs; easy direc
tions.
Send Thirty-five Cents in coins
for this pattern add 5 cents-for
each pattern for first class mail
ing. Send to Medford Mail Trib
une, Household Arts Dept., P.O.
Box 168, Old Chelsea Station,
New York 11, N. Y. Print .plain
ly NAME, ADDRESS, AND PAT
TERN NUMBER.
A bonus for our readers two
FREE patterns, printed in our
new Alice Brooks , Needlecraf t
Book for 1957! Plus wonderful
variety of designs to. order cro
chet, knitting, embroidery, huck
weaving, toys, dolls, others. Send
25 cents for your copy of this ex
citing NEW needle book now!.
world's airlines are about to em
bark on a tremendous invest
ment in their conversion to jets
and turboprops an investment
that cannot possibly pay itself
off before 1975, he said.t
"By then it will be known
how to make a Mach Two (twice
the speed of sound) transport,
and that will mark the beginning
of the next generation."
Ridenour said the Mach Two
aircraft, capable of speeds up to
1,500 miles an hour and altitude
up to 100,000 feet, will be a "ba
sically different" type of ve
hicle patterned after the stub
winged supersonic fighter of to
day.
Limit Reached
He said the logical step, after
still another 20 years or so,
would be a Mach Four (3,000
mile-an-hour) vehicle. But he
said this speed is "about the
limit" for flying through the at
mosphere. And he added: "I
think there may never be an air-
breathing Mach Four vehicle
This, he said, probably will be
the time for the missile-type air
liner which will travel in the
exposphere, in the fringe of
outer space, and whip around
the elobe at speeds of 7,000 to
8.000 miles an hour.
Ridenour foresees this aircraft
as a huge, windowless rocket
with the passengers sealed inside
and insulated against the tremen
dous blast-off shock and heat as
it tears through the atmosphere
toward the freedom of space
Will it be a piloted craft?
"Not in the present sense," he
said. "There probably will be
crew personnel, but mainly they
will he alons for the ride and
Dossibly to control the landing.1
The Lockheed missile chief
said he envisioned such a plane
as having stubby, retractable
wines for an -aid in landing
once it has returned to the atmos
phere.
X - iL'
SUES STUDIO Actress
Arlene Dahl (above) testi
fied in New York court in
her million dollar suit
against Columbia Pictures
that "obscene, degrading
and offensive" photographs
of her caused her to have
nose bleeds. She complained
that the pictures showed her
head but someone else's
body. Pictures were used to
exploit a movie called
"Wicked as They Come."
THEY WERE NO ANGELS
St Albans. Eneland (U.R)
Parishioners of a local church
have asked the vicar to make
the church boys club member
stop taking surplices from the
vestry to play gnosts in me
churchyard.
There are 20 million acres of
public property in California, in
cluding four national parks,
eight national monuments and
18 national forests. -
Permanent
$595
Haircuts
$00
CRATERIAN
Beauty Salon
41 S. Central Ph. SP 2-4830
up
up
Brain Insurance
for Your Business?
Why not?
Yon wouldn't dream of
ing your business without fire
or accident insurance. Or lia
bility insurance.
Then why not insure your com
pany's greatest future asset
educated brains !
There's only one place where
business and industry can get
the trained brains so vital to
future progress. That's from
our colleges and universities.
Today these institutions are do
ing their best to cope with a
mushrooming demand for edu
cated men and women. But they
face a erisis. For the pressure
of applications keeps mounting,
facilities must be expanded,
and faculty salaries must be
raised to a respectable level.
Insure your company's, aad
your country's, future assets
by helping the colleges or uni
versities of your choice nowf
The returns will be greater '
than you think.
If yoo went to know what the cot
leg crhit meant to you, writ for
a free booklet to: HIGHER EDUCA
TION, Box 36, Timet Square Sta
tion, New York 36, New York.
Published as a public service in eooperation tcith The Advertising
Council and the Newspaper Advertising Executives Association.
Mow to give
Mother two
months of
leisure
every year...
ri
u
0
0
0
0
0
D
0
Wouldn't you spend 23c a day to
eliminate dishwashing for Mom?
it's easy . . . and it isn't expensive.
She now spends an hour a day wash
ing dishes, and that's unpleasant
work. It adds up to over two months
of 40-hour weeks every year. What
can you do about it ? The answer is
simple. GIVE HER A GENERAL
ELECTRIC MOBILE MAID AU
TOMATIC DISHWASHER FOR
MOTHER'S DAY, May 12.
Needs no plumbing or
wlrlntf installnf ion.
Washes everything,
even pots and pans
with no pre-rinsing.
Give Mom this gift she'll treasure
for the rest of her life.
LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS "'''
IK'5.
An J JJ
Phone SP 3-5395
APPLIANCE CO.
SAME VALUE AT OUR ASHLAND STORE
AND BARGAIN STORE IN MEDFORD
Jufc.SS