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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 23, 1957)
HILTS 'Many Attend Graduation 8 MRS. M. F. CAVIU Hi!;, Caiif Among th fam ilies and friend ".ei'iirjl the irradiation excretes ' Vreka hlf: school J-jne 1 were Mr. rd Mrs. Fansom Smitn and daughter Juan; ."Jr. ar.d Mrs. Charles Spri. a:irt f.mily; Mr. and Mrs. Reason Evm'iier of Mcdford: Mr- and Mr J' Fog- , jwtto and daughter, Len: Mrs. W;!l:am Talhs and w,n. Terry; Mrs. Don Ward a.-.d iijgh'er D:ane, Mr. a&i Grady Bon ner; Cathy Monnie; Dorothy Fox; Robert P ak: Jerl John ion; Mr. ar: .'Jrt J.ih Nun, ' Vt. J. R. Smith and oaughter Cheryl. and Mrs. Jake Lindner and at tended the Railroad Days cele bration in Dunsmuir on Sunday. William Gilberg of Modesto visited at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donivan Ward recently, Gilberg was enroute to Rose burg to visit friends and reia-tr.es. Family Council Jonathan T 1 don t want N'atalie to gr to work. Natalie T 1 11 have the best baby sitter in the world. Is That So? Mr. and Mrs S'eve Osiecki and daughter of Pasadna are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don Powers and son. ! Mrs Dor'ar.'re R iger of Ash land, was guest p:a-.er at the Community club fana'a prt at Bur-Bl Rnsort Thursday, June 13. Mrs. Riigrr was for mer resident of Hil'3 and a member of tiw club. Mr- and Mrs. R. V. RtmiBi and soni of Cuernerville, Calif., were ovenuh) gues'o of Mr. and .Mrs. Orvli Gi'fn Tueday. Simms is Mrs. Green brother. Jonathan T My wife and I have been married eight years and have two children aged 5 and 7. Before we were mar ried we agreed that Natalie was to go back Jo work as soon as our children were old enough to go to school. Since reading all about the of proBlem of juvenile delinquency ; and working mothers, however. Kathy Monroe, accompanied 7 ? concIus'" her parents, Mr. and Mrs Nick I " r ,1 t V"y Fremeyer, and sister, went to ! ' L,'he mother to be a . , . , . . trom home. VJUllci HIIU USdll I HIS 1111S week end where she will re main for a visit with friends. Among the most audacious claim stakers in the world are many tiny songbirds weighing less than one ounce and the chief weapon used in holding their clearly-bounded property is a definite challenging song, delivered from a commanding perch. Just for fun, see if you can define the boundary of your favorite songbird's territory and then see how evenly the birds have spaced themselves over the land or along the stream. Br EUGENI BURNS Ranger-Naturalist Sunday, June 13, 1957 MEDFORP (OREGON) MAIL aIBU$E NINB Mr. and Mrs. Gilbert Luper and family left Wednesday for Crescent City, Eureka, and : Weott. In Weott they will be guests of Mr- and Mrs. Virgil j Nesbitt, former residents H:1M. Mr. and Mrs. Fremeyer made the trip on business. Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Ford of Houston, Tex . are visiting at Mr. and Mrs. Cecil P-.se of: the home of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Seattle visited relatives here 'MiI11 Mr- rrd is their daugh last week. j tr. Mr. end Mrs Ralph Clark Traaci Gwinn and Bill Smith and family of Vallejo were week I Ieft last Thursday night from end guests of Mr. and Mrs Ted "Iedford with the National Rose and family. Recent guests at the homo of Mr- and Mrs. Warren Fo and family were Mr. arid Mrs. John Gorden and children of Salem. Another guest at the Fox home Is Mrs. Fox s mother, Mrs. Anna Salladay, who plans to stay wv eral weeks. Guard for two weeks training Mrs. Gwinn is visiting relatives in Medford and vicinity while her husband is gone. Miw Cheryle Smith is spend ing the summer at the home of hr uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Dick Reichman in Scott Valley. A Father's Day dinner was' held at the horn of Mr. and Mrs Frank Ayris by their daughters and their families. They are Mr. and Mrs. Etigene Brown and family of Gold Hill i and Mr. afld .Mrs. Ted Sletten end family' of Medford. o Mrs- John Barbers and daughters, Deanna and Pauline, of Redding spent several days last week with John. Barbera and Judy. George Vieira, who has been hospitalized for the past year left Wednesday from the Siski you General and County hospital in Yreka for U. S. hospital in San Francisco, where he will be fitted to a leg brace. Week end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. John Barbera were Mr. and Mrs. Gorden Car penter of Redding. Mrs. Carpen ter Is Mrs. Barbara's sister. Dinner guest at the home of Mr and Mrs. Joe Vieira on Father's Day were Mr. and Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Burton McAllis ter and son Jackie of Garden City, Calif., were week end guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs- Joe Caston. Jackie re mained here with U grand parents for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Don Ward and daughters, Diane and Gayel Mike Nunes, and Frank Ward of Hornbrook, and Mr. and Mrs. R. C. DeVoe and sons of Med ford, went on a picnic on Fath er's Day at the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. A. McCulIough in Dave. Sage and sons; Mr. and!Medford- The birthdays of Mrs. Mrs Charles Veira and daugh ters; and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Rose of Seattle. A week end guest of Dorothy Fox was Dell Ann Pilliard of Yreka. Mr. and Mn. M. O. King and Mr. and Mrs. Evan Maupln went on an outing at Lake of the Woods recently. Mr. and Mrs. Forrest Burns and Mr. and Mrs- Bob Burns are In Riverside, Calf.. on a business and pleasure trip. Mr. and Mrs. T. Quamme, who moved to Reno. Nev., about a year ago are moving to Tuolom me. Calif., where Quamme is employed. Mr. and Mrs. M. M. Sief spent the week end in Mt. Shasta at the home of their daughter, Mr- DeVoe and McCulIough also observed- were Attending the Girl Scout Tai nt Show on Wednesday from Hornbrook. Mrs. Alex Rutledge and daughter Anne; Mrs. Grace Quigley; Mrs. Henley Clawson, Mrs. Paul Green and grand children; Danny and Mary Met ier; Penny Barnum, Mrs. Ella Rose and Mrs. Fred Cavin. KIDDIES WIN OBEDIENCE Memphis. Tenn. W Motor ists have begun to heed the homemade signs of a volunteer kiddie patrol which warn of "Children At Play," "Slow," and "Stop." The sharp-eyed kiddies jot down license numbers of those who don't obey the signs and turn them over to traffic police. My salary isn't so hot, but j I'm certainly able to provide I for the family decently. Maybe : I won't have the money to send j the kids through college, but tne way i see me thing it is much more important for them to grow into decent human be ings and they need their moth er for that. If they have enough health and character, they can work their way through college it won t hurt them. Natalie T Johnathan doesn't mention the fact that 1 will hav the best baby sitter in the world for the children my own moth er. She has volunteered to do the job because she knows how much it means to me to go back to work. The additional money would mean a lot to us as a family in more ways than one. For one thing, Jonathan now works over time and sees very little of the children. If I worked, he would give that up and be able to de vote more time to them. But it is not the money alone that counts. The fact is that I am a very nervous person and am often short-tempered with the children. I hate to be this way, but I can't help it. I feel that if I worked I would be so delighted to be with the chil dren at the end of the day, I would always be cheerful and able to give them my full at tention. JUNE SPECIAL! V S mmm mm mm mm mm mm FULLER HOUSE PAINTS Offer Ends June 30 EE I During June Special! Your choice cf a 4-foot stepladder or a 4-foot ex tension roller with purchase of 5 gallons or more of any Fuller exterior paint. FOR WOOD SIDING Fuller Pure Prtpared House Paint Its tough, flexible film really weath ers the weather 1 FOR THE RUSTIC HOUSE Fuller Shake I Shingle Finish Colors dry to a flat, beactiful sheen. $20 gallon 4 91 gallon QUALITY AT LOWEST PRICES I ii"il "W leaaTialaa-fle-m The Council: Religious and and civic leaders, educators and social scientists often point out in.li me worKing mother is one of the big contributing factors in the juvenile delinquency problem. At a recent Washing ton conference of experts, how ever, it was pointed out that many children of working moth ers get better supervision than the children of nonworking motners. It would be wrong, however for mothers like Natalie to take this as the go-ahead signal. Just because some stay-at-home moth ers nsglect their duty, it can't be assumed that children will be better off if their mothers go to work. Many well-brought-up children of working mother? might be still better in manv ways if their mothers had stay- en ai nome. Delinquency or non delinquency should not be th only standard by. which to judge xne cniia. The problem Is strictly an In dividual one. If Natalie is really bitterly discontented stavin at nome, as tier nervousness" in dicates, It is possible that her children would be better off In some ways under Grandmother's supervision. She should consider, however, that an older person is not phy sically equipped to give the best care to active youngsters. She should also realize that her youngest child will just be start ing school. This is a period of great stress and strain and a child may have a tremendous need for the security of his mother's presence. Since the additional Income is not essential in this case, Nat alie should, ponder long and deeply on the possible effects of her working. She should re member that her mother may be "the best baby sitter in the world," but she is still a sub situte for the real thing Moth er. (COPYRIGHT 19S7, ! GENERAL FEATURES CORP.) Two Local Men Attend Irrigation Celebration William H. Hill, 215 West Jackson st.. and A. A. Madden, Ashland, left yesterday for Boise and Richfield. Idaho, to take part in the semi-centennial of the first use of irrigation water in the Richfield area, it was reported Saturday. They will be gone about a week. Madden, formerly a newspa per publisher in Richfield, was instrumental in the attempt to obtain irrigation for that area. O SPtCIALISTS Pre Parking IN HOMEWARCS I Free Delivery METAL WORKS NEW LOCATION 2287 WEST MAIN ot Lozier Lane Commercial Industrial Residential Sheet Metal Work PHONE SP 2-4440 that soy Males of the red-winged black bird, robin and several song sparrows come north well in advance of the females perhaps six weeks ahead. Upon arrival, each male stakes out his claim to a particular portion of the earth. Then climbing to a prom- j inent perch where he can be seen and heard, he cries out his title in song actully a warlike j proclamation of territorial rights j and a warning against claim j jumping by other males. ! After the territory has been set up and held for some time, the female comes along. To her the male's defiant song is not one of warning but rather a forthright statement of land j onwership and an invitation to become a partner and build a nest. Wonderful Demonstration I recently observed a wonder ful demonstration of the cock's aggressiveness when a squirrel ventured near a small wren's nest. Between furious lunges at the squirrel's head the male wren perched on the tiptop of a tree and sang as if to burst his lungs. Finally when the squirrel retreated, the feather weight's cry was not to be con tained he sang with all his heart for a half hour. Great variations exist among birds in stating real estate rights: a flicker proclaims his holdings by hammering persist ently on dead stubs or on metal eave-troughs, all too often right over the bedroom window! The American ruffed grouse "drums." the prairie chicken, a close rel atives, "booms" by deflating the air sacs in the neck. ' Sire of territory varies. A robin may need a rather exten sive patch of lawn; a belted king fisher may claim a mile of a stream; a barn swallow may claim only a small footage of an old barn rafter because his feed ing range is the whole sweep of sky. (Released br McClure Newspaper Syndicate) set of this world-famous refer ence work in a handsome Seal craft binding. Each week new submissions will be considered Sorry, I simply can't answer your many friendly letters Please address your letter to: Is That So! c Bedford Mail Tribune, tox Sausalito, Artist Pablo Picasso was christened Pabife Nepomuceno Crispinianod da la Santissima Trinidad Ruiz y Picasso. 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