TWO MEDrOHD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Monday, August 12, 1957
Festival Has
Art Exhibit
Ashland Theatre-goers at the
Oregon Shakespearean Festival
In Ashland are enjoying another
added feature this year. A.- art
exhibit has bgen added to the
list of attractions. The pictures
are displayed against the outside
wall near the backstage entrance
to the Elizabethan theatre.
Showing works in oil. water-
color, and various other media
are Michael Thorniley of Talent,
Warren Wolf of Medford, and
Steve Bayless of Ashland. The
work of all three painters is in
the contemporary manner. A
new exhibiting facade has been
constructed for the showing,
placed just a few steps past the
theatre's main gate.
Warren Wolf, head of the art
department at Medford High
school, has studied at the Uni
versity of Oregon and the Kan
sas City Art institute, and has
had one-man shows at several
galleries, including the Portland
Art museum and Lawrence Gal
leries in Kansas City.
Michael Thorniley, a former
student at the University of Cali
fornia, Scripps college, and the
California College of Arts and
Crafts, has enjoyed a wide ex
hibition of his works, inuding
showings at the Laguna Art fes
tival, Oregon Artists annual, and
the National Orange show.
Steve Bayless, now art in
structor at Southern Oregon col
lege, has studied at the Univer
sity of Orego) and Washington
State college, and has. exhibited
his works at the Portland Art
museum. Southern Oregon col
lege, and Eastern Oregon col
lege. Hoppes Entertain
Shipmates Class
Thirty-six members of the'
Shipmates class of First Meth
odist church met in the garden
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hoppe
Friday evening for a potluck
upper. -
After the supper. Mrs. Claudia
Gass, skipper of the class, pre
sided at a short business meet
ing. .Mrs. Clarence Jorden re
ported shortage of dish towels
and hot dish mats at the church
camp on Dead Indian. It was
voted to remedy this need by
having each member of the class
make one and have it ready for
use next summer.
Mrs. R. E. Waldron of Vallejo,
Calif., was welcomed as the only
out of town guest. She is visiting
her sister, Mrs. A. E.- Brock
away, Stewart avenue. Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Basore "were greet
ed on their return from a year
in California.
Games were played as a fin
ish to a pleasant evening.
Society
Service League
Has Annual Party
Junior Service league held the
annual summer party Thursday
evening at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Graff on Hillside
drive. About . 70 attended. The
summer party is the only social
function of the year which the
league gives for members and
their husbands.
Mrs. Floyd Baker was chair
man, with Mrs. Philip Lowery
assisting her.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Field, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Mickelson, Allan Hunt
and Miss Katherine Cass of El
izabeth, N.J. The Mickelsons re
cently came to Medford from
Eugene, and Mrs. Mickelson, for
merly a member of the Eugene
Jnior Service league, has been
invited to transfer - to the Med
ford league.
'
Veterans Awarded
Auxiliary Prizes
Camp White Prizes fur
nished by Medford unit of the
American Legion auxiliary were
awarded to high scoring veter
ans for the month of July at the
last meeting of Camp White
Veterans' Bridge club. They
went to Tom Randall, first: Tom
Munds, second, and William
Hickey, third.
Mrs. George B. Dean and Mrs.
Fred Purdin were hostesses for
the evening, and served refresh
ments following cards.
North - south winners were
Mrs. Frank Baker and Roy
Pruitt, first, 125 points; "Mr.
Hickey and William Isaacs, sec
ond, 121Vi; Mrs. Davenport and
Mrs. Walker, Grants Pass, third,
120V4; the Howard Boyds,
fourth, 119 points.
Mrs. Dean and Mrs. Purdin
scored 142V4 points to lead east
west winners. Other winners
were the Jack Mitchells, second
130Vi: the Berg Martens, third,
127, and Mrs. Randall and Ar
thur Scarseth, fourth, 124
points.
Camp White club plays each
Friday night.
Family Returns
Mr. and Mrs. Clayton McCon-
nel and two children arrived
in Medford last week from Eli
City, Okla., and' are at home at
211 West Jackson street. Mr.
McConnel will be employed in
the Morton Mill, where he for
merly worked.
CALENDAR
Monday:
6:30 p.m. Medford Toastmis
tress, home of Mrs. Charles
Thatcher, 210 Beatty st.
Eagle
e Point Group
Sets Installation
Saturday Evening
Eagle Point Eagle Point
Jaycettes will hold installation
of officers Saturday, August 17,
at 8 p.m. at the Teenage club
on B street in Eagle Point. Cen
tral Point Jaycettes will con
duct the ceremony.
Dancing, refreshments and
games will follow the ceremon
ies. The entertainment will be
in the carnival theme, and a
clown will greet guests as they
arrive at the hall.
All Junior Chamber of Com
merce members and their friends
are invited to attend.
New Players Win
Honors at Bridge
Two new players won first
place for k the Riverside Bridge
club's master point play last
Wednesday afternoon. Winners
were Mrs.- Sam Richardson and
Mrs. William Knope, playing
east-west positions.
Other high scores were:
North-couth, Dr. and Mrs. Geo
rge B. Dean, first; Mrs. Frank
R. Baker and Paul Hatton, sec
ond; Mrs. Howard Boyd and Roy
Pruitt, third, Mrs. Hatton and
Al Gilhousen, fourth.
East-west winners were Mrs.
B. B. Hughes and Mrs. Walter
Lee and Mrs. Mary Trout, third;
Mrs. Oda Thomason and Mrs.
J J- Beaman, fourth.
h
Family Leaves
After Stay Here
Mrs. Sam Maddux Jr., and her
three children, Michael, Jimmie
and Sara, left Friday after
spending two weeks here with
Mrs. Maddux parents, Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. Collins, 164 Black Oak
drive. The family will be joined
at Albuquerque. N.M., by Briga
dier General Maddux of the
United States Air Force and
will then continue to San An
tonio, Tex.
General Maddux has been
transferred from a California
field to Randolph field, Texas.
Salad
Dissolve lime gelatin in hot
water and add 2 tablespoons
fresh lime or lemon juice and
some finely chopped fresh mint.
When thickened, fold in well-
drained canned fruit cocktail
and a sliced banana.. Chill in
square pan, and slice to serve on
crisp lettuce.
1
Beets
Blend 3 tablespoons butter or
margarine, 2 tablespoons prepar
ed mustard, 1 tablespoon sugar,
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce,
Vz teaspoon paprika, and Va tea
spoon salt together and heat.
Pour this mixture over 1 can
(1 lb. 13 oz.) small whole beets,
drained, and cook until the
beets are hot.
I I MEDFORD A
Pewieys
MONDAY NITE
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Bovs' sturdy brown leather oxfords with synthetic soles, rubber heels. Fully lined. Sizes
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2
98
Oregon Legionnaires
Select Salem Man
Eugene (W Some 1000
delegates to the annual Oregon
American Legion 1 convention
here wound up their four-day
conclave Saturday with the el
ection of officers.
Charles "Chuck" Huggins, Sa
lem, succeed.' Portland attorney
Don Eva as department com
mander, and George Nelson, of
Portland,- was elected vice com
mander. Karl Wagner, Eugene, was re
elected national executive com
mitteeman for Oregon.
The American Legion ladies
auxiliary voted Mrs. Anson In
gels, Salem, president, and Mrs.
Muriel Acton, Portland, vice
president. Mrs. Grover Francis,
Portland, was elected secretary
and Mrs. McKinley Kane, Dun
dee, treasurer.
Cut io Fit
1 1
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1224'
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Bodice a smoothly buttoned
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Printed Pattern 9253: Half
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Printed directions on each pat
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. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
(coins) for this pattern add 5
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class mailing. Send to Marian
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18th St., New York 11, N.Y.
Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS
with SIZE 'and STYLE NUMBER.
Snappy-Wrap
6tyQ&c8w&
Wear this in, out and 'round
! the house as apron, jumper, or
sundress. Belt cinches waist;
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Pattern 7390: tissue pattern;
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Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS
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IMail Tribune, Household Arts
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Station. New York 11, N.Y.
! Print plainly NAME.ADDRESS,
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A bonus for our readers: two
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Division Which Helped Shape American
History Dying in Korea; Rest Earned
Br PPC QUIGG
United Press Correspondent
New York - (IP) An old
friend is dying in Korea. This
friend is not a person although
to some it seemed, through two
wars, to have an individuality
of its own and to act on its own
like a think alive, It is just a
name. Matter of fact, just a
number.
But it helped shape American
history from the day the bombs
fell at Pearl Harbor to the end
of the fighting in Korea.
The 24th Infantry Division is
heading for a rendezvous with
oblivion. The body of men and
equipment serving under that
name in Korea will be redesig
nated as the 1st Cavalry Div
ision, and' army personnel of
the 1st Cavalry in Japan will
be removed from that country
and reassigned elsewhere.
Shoved on Shelf
Then the name "24th Divis
ion" will be quietly shoved onto
the shelf. The U. S. Army will
remove the name from its ac
tive list.
When the little enemy planes
came in from the sea at ifirst
light of Dec. 7, 1941, the 24th
was near Pearl Harbor and suf
fered minor casualties.
The rain was torrential on
! the marshes when the 24th seiz
ed the Hollandia airdrome in
New Guinea and the jungle was
crawling with biting, stinging
bugs. The rainy season was on,
too, for the landing at Red
Beach on Leyte, and the 24th
drove up Leyte Valley and took
Breakneck Ridge in agonizing
fighting.
Elements of the 24th fought
all over the Philippines, and in
February, 1945, one of its bat
talions landed against heavy op
position on the rock of Correg
idor and helped paratroops de
liver that tiny fortress isle once
more into American hands.
The division fought across
tropical Mindanao , in the Phil-
Around Hollywood
By ALINE MOSBY
United Press Correspondent
Hollywood (IPl Anthony
Perkins hitchhiked to Hollywood
from Broadway two years ago.
"7
Aline Mosey
In two months
Tony, now a
top cinema
heart - throb,
will return to
the stage and
will live in the
same S50-a-month
apart
ment. v
While many
young stars
talk in vain of going back to the
true-blue art of the theater, Tony
is one who actually is giving up
movies for a year to act on the
stage in "Look Homeward, An
gel," at one-fourth his usual sal
ary. He lived in a $50-a-month
apartment during his days on
the stage in "Tea and Sym
pathy" his first play that
brought him to Hollywood star
dom in "Friendly Persuasion."
Unchanged by Success .
"And in October I'll be back
in that same $50-a-month apart
ment I've always kept it," grin
ned Tony showing that fan mag
azine layouts and autograph
hounds haven't changed him. .
Instead of hitch-hiking, how
ever,' Tony will drive cross-country
in his sports car, top down,
guaranteeing a crowd of eager
girls at gas stations in a dozen
states.
Tony's Broadway return Is
unique. For the first time an
actor who has been signed for
a picture is going to New York
to star in the stage version first.
Paramount bought the film
rights to the book "Look Home
ward, Angel" seven years ago.
but the script gathered dust be
cause no young actor could be
found to play the central char
acter in the Thomas Wolfe clas
sic. "
Tousle-haired lanky Perkins
was earmarked for the role the
minute Paramount viewed on
his wolfian appearance and man
ner two years ago, but the studio
has kept him busy under con
tract with other movies. Recent
ly producer Kermit Bloomgart-
en coincidentally asked Perkins
to do a stage version of the same
book this fall. Now Paramount,
figuring a Broadway hit will
only help the movie, happily
scheduled the screen version for
next July.
"I had wanted to return to
Broadway anyway this fall and
was reading many scripts," said
Perkins, polishing off beans and
frankfurters in the Paramount
commissary.
Anxious io Return
It's hard to learn how to act
in the movies and I am anxious
to return to the stage. This is a
good time because I have four
unreleased pictures "The Tin
Star,' 'Desire Uunder the Elms,'
"The Matchmaker' and "This Bit
ter Earth.'
."I was asked to do 'Wines
burg, Ohio' on the stage, but I
don't know the works of Sher
wood Anderson and I read all of
Wolfe's books at Columbia Uni
versity and I feel close to him."
Since Tony has been an
nounced for both "Look Home
ward, Angel" versions, he has
been deluged with letters from
Wolfe fans and relatives.
As Wolfe in the story I'll be
in long hair and period clothes,"
the actor said. "Ths only time
I've had a haircut in two years
was for 'Fear Strikes Out.' "
ippines, stormed Davao, . cleared
Libby- airdrome in May, and
continued patrol action even af
ter Japan's surrender officially
ended the war.
First in Korea
Remember the start of the Ko
rean war, and the early, des
perate days when American
ground troops were first sent
there? That was the 24th U. S.
Division. Outnumbered by the
Communist attackers, the 24th
attempted to withdraw at Tae
jon, broke into scattered ele
ments, and its commander, Maj.
Gen. William F. Dean, was cap
tured. Then came the holding action,
then the long drive north, and
when the Chinese Communists
entered the Korean war late
in 1950, the 24th Division was
within seven miles of the Yalu
river. '
In multiple advances and re
treats the road signs bearing
the code name of the division
were familiar sights up and
down the shattered length of
Korea. In all, the division at
tacked north across the 38th
Parallel three separate times.
Just a name .... a number . . .
under which many thousands of
young men have served, sweat
ed, ached, bled, died. It was a
restless, moving, fighting name.
It earned retirement. Let it rest.
APPEARS WEDNESDAY The
"Be-Bop-a-Lulu" singer. Gene
Vincent, will appear at the new
Medford Armory Wednesday.
Aug. 14, for a show and dance
from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Tickets
are on sale at Swem's.
Jill PAST
Depot - 148 N. Front - SP I-
-18M j
o
MONDAY NIGHT
SPECIALS
All Washable Cotton Skirts - Shorts
Pedal Pushers - and Sports Blouses
$
199 I OPEN
0 Tonight
U )) , Until
ladleys 9:00!
i j
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Use Your
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Fireplace-Furnace
Invented by Local Man
Philip' L. Burns, Home Own
ers' specialties, Medford and
Ashland, has invented a fireplace-furnace
that gives 24-hour
automatic floor level heat from
wood.
Burns, who is owner of the
"floor flo fireplace unit," re
ports that the open front fire
place will warm up to four large
rooms for 24 hours on one fuel
ing during cold weather.
The steel unit. Burns said,
may be inclosed in the favorite
masonry and brick mason of thel
home owner. He said that the
fireplace - furnace will perform
as a modern wood furnace.
GOODBYE WITH THE CHIPS
St. Joseph, Ind. (If) A pair
of bandits played an ace-in-the
hole at a card game Saturday.
The surprised card players sur
rendered $850 when the two
robbers entered and flashed a
pistol, which took the pot.
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