Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 07, 1957, Image 20

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    BIT MSDFORD (OREGOrT) MAIL THIBUNS
Sunday. July 7, 1SST
Burnette-Reichstein Wedding
Held in Talent First Methodist
Talent The Talent Methodist
Aurch .as the setting Sunday,
4un S3, for the wedding of Miss
feianis Lane Burnette, daughter
41 Sr. and Mrs. Laurence Bur
ktu. 111 North Second street,
Taisnt, and William Rodgers
Jiciastein, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Vayne Reichstein, 134 North
ftt street, Talent.
the Rev. Alice May Woolley
rffiated at the double ring
Cromony held at noon attended
by 12a friends and relatives.
for her wedding the bride
wore a white lace over nylon
net and taffeta ballerina length
frock. Her fingertip length veil
was held by a coronet of pearl
and she carried a cascade bou
quet of pink sweetheart rose
buds and a lavender orchid. She
borrowed a lucky dime from her
great aunt to wear in her shoe.
Mr. Burnette gave his daughter
in marriage.
Miss Cora Mae Gleim was
honor attendant. She wore a yel
low cotton and nylon eyelet
frock with white accessories and
carried a bouquet of pink gladi
olus and white Ester Reed
daisies.
Candlelighters were Miss Lin
da Kay Hamilton and Miss April
Burnette, cousins of the bride.
They wore mint green frocks of
net over taffeta.
Clayton J. Miller served as
best main and Gerald W. Reich
i teln, brother of the bridegroom,
and Harry Allen Gleim seated
the guests.
Pink roses, white daisies, pink
mapdragons and pink carna
tions decorated the church. Mrs.
Charles V. Carmichael played
the traditional wedding music
Jerry Holdridge was soloist.
Following the ceremony a re
ception was held in the church
annex.
Mrs. William Gleim cut and
served the wedding cake, while
Mrs. Vieva Saltmarsh, aunt, of
the bride, poured the punch.
Mrs. Etta Smith, great aunt of
the bride, poured the coffee.
Mrs. Dorothy Suksdorf of Rose
burg was at the gift table and
Mrs. Clayton Miller was in
charge of the guest book.
For her daughter's wedding
Mrs. Burnette wore a navy blue
dress with white accessories. !
Plan Picnic
Shady Cove The Shady Cove
and Upper Rogue grange home
economics club will hold a pic
nic In Casey State park at 12
noon Tuesday, July 9. The Up
per Rogue group will furnish
coffee. All members are to bring
their own service and two dishes
of food.
Wash white cotton gloves as
soon as possible after each
wearing. Dirt becomes more dif
ficult to remove the longer it is
left in the gloves.
Mrs. Reichstein chose a shadow
grey dress with white accessor
ies. They both wore lavender
orchid corsages.
Out of town guests at the
ceremony included Mrs. Lillie
Burnette of Salem.
The newlywed couple will
make their home at 134 North
First street, Talent, following a
wedding trip to Union Creek re-
sort. For her traveling attire
the bride chose a white dacron
dress.
The bride attended Talent
High school. The bridegroom at
tended Talent High school and
is now an airman third class in
the United States Air force. He
expects an overseas assignment
this month.
Quick Responses
In Thermometer
Now Perfected
Buffalo, N.Y. IW Cornell
Aeronautical Laboratory Inc.,
has developed a thermometer
that registers temperature
changes a billion times faster
than th ordinary houshold thr
mometer. The quick-response thermom
eter senses a change less than
one-millionth of a second after it
occurs. With it, the laboratory's
scientists measure temperatures
on aircraft and missile models
undergoing tests in the corpora
tions 10,000-mile-an-hour hyper
sonic shock tunnel.
A test run in the shock tunnel
is completed in about one-thous-
sandth of a second and standard
thermometers are useless for
such brief periods.
Robert Vidal, a young engi
neer in the aerodynamics depart
ment, designed the thermometer
Its sensing agent is a film of
platinum, only four-millionths
of an inch thick, printed on a
glass base. The platinum film is
so thin that it picks up or loses
heat almost instantly when sur
rounding temperatures vary.
Although the thermometer
will never be used in the home,
it will have widespread applica
tions elsewhere.
"In addition to present uses
in high-temperature, high-speed
aeronautical research, we expect
the thermometer will be applied
to other problems in research
and industry," Vidal said.
"It has never been possible to
measure temperatures in a cylin
der head during firing, and we
think a quick-response thermom
eter might do the job."
Vidal added that scientists at
the University of Florida have
employed the thermometer to
measure temperatures in jet en
gine inlets. He gave a demon
stration of the thermometer's
rapid response by passing his
hand six inches from it. The in
dicator dial jumped instantly
due to the inventor's body heat.
-f-t!
&f - it fi JsJ W
Kill A t
WfrJTIf $ifp:
:i--?yj' -.- , -
WCTU Postpones
Meeting a Week
The Woman's Christian Tem
perance union will meet Thurs
day, July 18. the third instead
of the second Thursday of the
month. It wil meet at 11 a.m.
in Hawthorne park, in back of
the Boy Scout headquarters.
Members are to bring a sack
lunch for a noon picnic lunch.
A program for the afternoon is
being planned.
Dessert
Here's a dessert for patio bar
becue suppers. Prepare lemon
gelatin, adding a little extra lem-.
on juice. When thickened, fold
in well-drained canned cling
peach slices and a few pitted
fresh cherries. Spoon into waxed
paper cups and chill. Serve in
the cups, topped with a little
soft ice cream, if desired.
Sumner Lunch
Happy idea for summer lunch,
and practically no work; chill a
can of cling peach halves, drain
and fill with raspberries. Serve
on crisp lettuce with lemon and
honey dressing. Raisin bread
toast spread with cream cheese
accompanies this.
Braised round steak is cer
tainly a family favorite. Slow
cooking with a limited amount
of liquid and in a covered uten
sil produces the finest results.
For variation the steak may be
cooked with mushrooms, olive
slices, in a barbecue sauce, in
condensed mushroom soup or in
tomato soup.
Complete Drapery
Decorating Service
Full Length Samples
BANK TERMS
Wakefield Drapery
1100 Crater Lake Ave.
Ph. SP 2-6010
Differences In r-at Loaf
A meat loaf can be a real
challenge . . . each one can be
different by just changing the
seasonings. Chili sauce, horse
radish, prepared or dry mustard,
cloves, sage, and allspice, are
just a few suggestions for mak
ing a meat loaf mixture different.
Don't Say
"Hello"
Say---
"FILTER-FLO"
Mr. and Mrs. John Raymond Pool
(Brainerd photo)
Miss Constance Arlene White
Bride of John Raymond Pool
Baskets of lavender and white
gladiolus decorated the First
Methodist church Sunday, June
30, for the 2:30 o'clock afternoon
wedding of Miss Constance Ar
lene White and John Raymond
Pool. The Rev. George Rose
berry officiated at the double
rmg ceremony attended by more
than 100 friends and relatives.
The bride is a daughter of Mrs.
Juanita White, 331 West Sixth
street, Medford. The bridegroom
is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Alden
Keith, 902 Queen Anne avenue,
Medford.
The bride was given in mar
riage, by Ralph Franklin, an un
cle, from Etna, Calif. For her
wedding the bride wore a gown
cf French imported Chantilly
lace styled with appliqued
flowers and pearls at the neck
line. The full skirt terminated in
a chapel train. Her short veil
was held by a tiara of pearls and
she carried a cascade bouquet
of stephanotis encircling a white
orchid on a white Bible.
Mrs. Eddy Baker, sister of the
bride from Chico, Calif., was
maid of honor. Miss Lois Pool,
sister of the bridegroom, and
Miss Barbara Franklin, Etna,
Calif., cousin of the bride, were
bridesmaids.
Mrs. Baker wore a lavender
r
Beat the heat!
Keep Cool Easily and
Economically with a New
Westinghouse Streamliner
AIR CONDITIONER
vf3r
o
o
mmmr-T'?,Zmr ' Thinner!
,2!! Lower! ,
iE:::::::":H:::-:?:ss5sbSS Smarted
iMi ib:ir-::;5:s::2: SsssssgSo: ill 1
Fit flush with walla mmd or out. No more Air Conditioner
"hangover" when you install the amut new Streamliner!
COHMCr . . . "Fashion Thin" to blend in. No bulky overhang,
inside or outside.
$ tTRlAUUHtO STYUM9 enhances beauty of any room. Low
eilhouette lets you enjoy more light and view.
0 fiHOBKTiP CONTROL. Complete cooling comfort on a patented
single dial, plus built-in thermostat you set and forget.
coolino trncitMCY you've never known before. Streamliner
features adjustable, no-draft grilles.
tfk AMD It AttP MOOtlSI Run on 115 volts. Save on
installation and electricity! Also-big capacity 1 HP. 230-volt models.
AS LITTLE AS
SD(fnOO
Down
EASY TERMS
wocAWBt smtE-rFrr's "Westinghouse
TROWBRIDGE & FLYNN
ELECTRIC CO.
214 West Main
Phone SP 3-6241
lace frock with matching chif
fon sash. The other attendants
wore lavender silk crystalline
frocks similar to Mrs. Baker's.
Their hats were of lavender chif
fon and they carried nosegay
bouquets of pink Amling roses.
All of the dresses worn by the
attendants and the bride were
designed and made by the
bride's mother.
Little Cynthia Ann Earnest
was flower girl. She wore a lav
ender silk crystalline frock with
full skirt and had flowers in her
sash, hair, and as a wristlet.
Carl Fader was ring bearer.
Arlyn Granger served as best
man while Peter Young and Guy
Parker seated the guests.
Mrs. D. G. MacDougall was
soloist and Mrs. Jerry Sherman
played the traditional organ
wedding music.
For her daughter's wedding
Mrs. White wore a pink frock
with white accessories- They both
wore lavender orchid corsages.
Following the ceremony a re
ception was held in the church
parlors. Lavender and white or
chids with fern and candles dec
orated the bride's table. Mrs.
Dean Smith cut and served the
wedding cake, Miss Jacque Bates
poured while Miss Delores Pool
was at the gift table. Miss Myda
McCabe was in charge of the
guest book.
The newlywed couple will
make their home at 322 Orange
street, Medford, after a wedding
trip to Carmel, Calif. For her
traveling attire the bride chose
a light blue box suit with white
blouse and blue accessories.
The bride is a graduate of
Medford High school. The bride
groom attended Medford High
school and is employed by Fir
Ply corporation.
Engineer Students
Also Get 'Culture'
Cleveland HP! Students at
Case Institute of Technology
here are getting a large dose ol
Botticelli and Bach along with
atomic energy and quantitative
analysis.
Under its new program of
"Humanities," students are re
quired to spend about one out
of every four campus hours in
pursuit of culture and human
relations improvement. Case is
one of the few engineering
schools to insist that its grad
uates have a smattering of "cui
ture" along with their scientific
and engineering knowledge.
Prof. Robert L. Shurter, head
of the program, explained it is
necessary for undergraduates to
mix literature, music and art
with laboratory test tubes and
nuclear advancements because
of their needs in later life.
"Today the engineer rises
rapidly in an industrial society'
he said. "A survey of Case grad
uates shows more than 60 per
cent in administrative or execu
tive positions.
"Growing responsibilities of
the engineer require a greater
knowledge of personalities, phil
osophy and society."
Case's four-year integrated se
quence of general study develop
ment along with scientific
courses involves a humanities
faculty of 32 instructors, lectur
ers and professors.
Study areas range from more
forceful speaking and writing
anthropology and drama his
tory, to Greek, Oriental art and
Shakespeare.
Ex-Teachers Meet
All ex-teachers are invited, to
the Monday, July 8, meeting' ol
the Jackson county retired
teachers association to be held I
at noon at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. J. R. Tyrrell, Dead Indian
road, five miles beyond Lake 1
Creek. A potluck picnic is
planned. 1
Swem's
ANNUAL
mo-SUM 171
7HJ
Store Wide!
BARGAINS IN ALL DEPT'S
EVERYTHING PRICED TO SELL!
NEW THIS YEAR
II
Bonus for Cash
EXTRA
5
0 DISCOUNT
ON ALL SALE MERCHANDISE
PAID FOR IN CASH
Only Sale Merchandise and Only During Sale
Record Specials
Big Variety All Kinds Music
Albums & Singles
Terrific Bargains
See the Sale Table Record Shop Main Floor
Clocks
Assorted Styles
Wall Type -Vi OFF
2 Only
Hall Type - Vz OFF
Exceptional Buys
Balcony
Phonos
. A Few Real
Good Buys
Limited Number -Choose
Early
Record Shop
A Few Only Sets of Syracuse China
Alpine Regular 105.10 Value Sale 39.95
6 5 Pc. Place Sets, 1 Med. Platter, 1 Cake Plate
Coralbel Regular 104.30 Value Sale 39.95
6 5 Pc. Place Sets, 6 Fruits, 1 Med. Platter, 1 Gravy Boat
(Assorted other pieces, cream, sugar, etc., 50 OFF)
Standish Regular 128.40 Value Sale 49.95
6 5 Pc. Place Sets, 6 Fruits, 1 Med. Platter, 1 Gravy
Vernonware Gingham Plaid
Open Stock Pieces 50 OFF
16 Pc. Starter Sets 13 OFF
Odds 'N Ends In fiel-Air, Dessert Bloom
Hawaiian Coral, Calif. Casual
Sacrificed at 23 OFF
FOSTORIA-Patterns Priced to Clear
American Lady (Crystal) Mademoiselle
Anniversary Moon Ring
Colonial Dame (Crystal). Radiance
Colonial Dame (Green) . Shell Pearl
Contemporary Tumblers Assorted Colors and Styles
TERRIFIC REDUCTIONS
These patterns are a!! still available from
factory and we will be glad to "Special
Order" any fill-in requirements or re
placements. Any such orders given dur
ing sale week subject to 13 discount.
Assorted
Odds 'n Ends
up to 23 off
Sale Tables
2nd Floor
PINKING
SHEARS
Regular 6.95
On Sale 3.98
Limited Number
Sale Table 1st Floor
Luggage
Assorted Pieces
Excellent Buys
Mens & Ladies
y3 to y2 off
1st Floor
LAMPS
Assorted Styles
20 to 50
OFF
Choose Early
All Floors
SMOKING
ACCESSORIES
Assorted Styles
& Kinds
As Much as 23 off
on some lighters,
etc.
Sale Table 1st Floor
China & Pottery
Artware
Vases, Bowls,
Ash Trays, Figurines
& Assorted Bric-a-Brac
Terrific Reductions
Sale Table 1st Floor
ICE TEA
SPECIAL
8 Ice Tea Tumblers
& Free Box
"Constant
Comment Tea"
, 1st Floor
Cameras
Plus
Flash Attachments &
Carry Cases
V3 Off
Sale Table 1st Floor
FRAMED
Pictures
Assorted Subjects
Many Sizes
50
Up to
O OFF
All Floors
Metal ware
Brass Copper
and Other Metal
Artware
Useful & Decorative
Sale Table 1st Floor
BOXED
Stationery
Terrific Buys
Some
Open Stock Paper
& Envelopes Also
Up To V& OFF
Sale Table Balcony
"Odds & Ends"
See This Table
. of
Slightly Defectives,
Shop worn or soiled
Merchandise
YOU WON'T BELIEVE
THE PRICES
Barometers
Thermometers &
Hygrometers
Odd Lots
Perfect Condition,
Sale Tables 1st Floor
BOOKS
Big Reductions
Assorted
Subjects & Titles
One Week Only
July 8th thru 13th
DOORS OPEN 9 A.M. DAILY
NO LAY-A-WAYS
COME EARLY - GET THE BARGAINS