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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 11, 1957)
rVTTARIAV FELLOWSHIP (5-rond and F-u;-rh Wedr.er"v' Wednesday. Oct. 2.3. next n-.eetir.g V A LIFT VIEW SEVENTH-DAY AI F.NTUT South S'a? rd. W. Floyd Bresee, pastor Saturday: 10 am Sabbath school 11:30 am. Wcrh:p hour Wednesday : 7 30 pm Teachers' meeting 8 p.m. Prayer meeting COUNTY CHURCHES WEST M.UN CHURCH OF CHRIST 1701 West Main it. Sunday. 9:45 a.m. B:n!e classes 10 45 a m. Morning worship 7 30 p.m. Evening worship Wednesday: 7.30 p rii. Midweek Bible itudy Thursday: U0 p.m. Ladies Bibla class ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH. L'LCA Fourth and Oakdale G. Herbert Hiiierman. pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a m Worship service Thursday: 7:30 p m. Choir practice Saturday: 9 a m". S e c o n d year catechetical class 10 15 am. First year catechetical class HARHIMAN HITS FAUBUS New York IP Gov. Averell Harriman predicts coinage of the word "Faubus." Harriman, a Democrat, said the word will be added to dictionaries to de scribe "an office-holder who has degraded the responsibilities of his office, and who has demagogically aroused the prej udices of the people for his own .personal advantage." Harriman offered his prediction and defi nition while charging that Ar kansas Gov. Orval E. Faubus, also a Democrat, was primarily to blame for the Little Rock school integration crisis. ASHLAND FIRST CONGREGATION AL CHl'RCIl 'United Church of Christ) 7! 7 Siskiyou blvd Fred G. Piocher. pastor Sunday: 9 45 a.m. Sunday school 11 am Morning worship 12:45 p.m. Pilgrim fellowship luncheon Wednesday: 8 p m Choir rehearsal Thursday: 2 p m Pilgrim study club JACKSONVILLE ASSEMBLY OF GOD William D. Turnbuil.pastor Sunday- 9:45 a m. Sunday school 11 am. Morning worship 6 30 p m. Christ Ambassadors 7:30 p rr.. Evangelistic service Th-irsday: "0 a m. Prayer meeting 7 JO pm. Bible study FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Robert Bridge, pastor Sunday: 9 43 am Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service TALENT FIRST METHODIST CHURCH North Main at Laurel Ross Knntts, pastor Louis Miles, associate pastor Sunday: 9 45 a m. Sunday school 11 a m. Morning worship 3 p m. Loyalty Visitation 5 p.m. Junior and senior hrgh fel lowships Wednesday: 7:30 p m. Choir rehearsal Thursday: 6 p m. Wesley foundation, at Wes ley house FRIENDS CHURCH Old Pacific Hwy. A. Clark Smith, pastor Sunday: 10 a m. Sunday school 11 am MnrninB urircVii n ! 6:30 o.m. Youth mpitin 7.30 p m. Evening worship PHOENIX X '--57 Will it always be too big for Bobby ? Bobby will be the happiest boy this tide of heaven the day he gets that M.D. after his name. But right now things don't look too promising. Bobby live in a community where there'i a serious shortage of class rooms, teachers and good school books. That means less schooling for Bobby than he needs. Let's see that this doesn't happen in our schools. You can help by sup JjDrting our School Board, by at- tending PTA meetings and school conferences. for more Information write toi BETTER SCHOOLS ) E. 40th Str.et, Now York 16, N. Y. BE MOT HAVE fBST-RATE SCHOOLS ftilished as a public service Pi cooperation with T!ie Advertising Council Jpai the Newspaper Advertising Executives Association FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH North Main and Helman sts. B. J. Holland, minister Sunday: 9:45 a m. Sunday school 9:45 and 11 a m Morninz worship 5:30 p m. Westminster Senior high lenowsmp Wednesday: 8 p.m. Choir rehearsal CENTRAL POINT CHURCH OF CHRIST Third and Oak sts. i Mr. Jean M. Shelley, minister Sunday: 9:45 am Sunday school 10.45 a.m. Worship service 10:45 a m. Junior church worship 6:30 p m. Junior. Junior High and Senior youth meetings 7:30 p.m. Evening evangelistic service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Midweek service COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH Paul O. Kroon, pastor Sunday: t 9 45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 6:45 p.m. Prayer pals, jet cadets, senior young people, basic Bible stu dies, pre-service prayer meeting 7:45 p.m. Evening Evangelistic service Monday: 7:30 p.m. Men's prayer meeting Wednesday: 7 pm. Choir rehearsal 8 p.m. Bible study and prayer FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Dr. Norman Tully. pastor Sunday: 9:43 a.m. Church worship 10:50 am. Church school 7 p.m. Youth group PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH Corner of Pine at Sixth st. Clarence Jackson, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 6:45 p.m. Youth service 7:30 p.m. Evening service Thursday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer service EAGLE POINT COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH Joseph J. Munshaw, pastor Sunday: 9:4j a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 6:30 p.m. Youth fellowship 7:30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 6:4a p.m. Choir practice 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Grange hall John Trude, pastor Saturday: 9:30 ajn. Sabbath school 11 a m. Morning worship, W. E. At kins speaker Wednesday : 7:30 p.m Prayer meeting, home ol Mr. and Mrs. Evan Moore. GOLD HILL CHRISTIAN CHURCH Cor. Fourth st. and Sixth ave Bill J. Miller, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Church worship 7 p.m. Christian endeavor Thursday: 7:30 p.m. Midweek service M A Brand New ONLY mi PORTABLE Month 4 l Try Before You Buy! 3 Months Rental May Be Applied to Purchase Price CallSP3-1731 Since 1927-YOUR OFFICE BOY 115 W. Main St. Medford, Oregon 'l-.V.'JHW 1 1 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Perry M Johnson, pastor Corner First and Rose sts. Sunday: 9 45 a m. Sunday school 11 a m Morning worship 6:30 p.m. Baptist training union 7:30 p m. Evening worship Thursday: 7:3a pm. Midweek Bible study FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Second and Church sts. Sunday 10 a.m. Church school 11 am. Worship Wednesday: 9:30 a.m. Bible study and praver hour SHADY COVE SI MARTIN'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH (School gymnasium W. B. MacHenry, vicar Sunday. 9 am. Morning service 9:30 a.m. Church school RURAL CHURCHES CHURCH OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD EPISCOPAI W. B. MacHenry, vicar Prospect Sunday: 10 a.m. Church school 11:15a jn. Morning service Thursday: 7:30 p m. Inquirers group 8:30 p.m. Discussion group COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH Butte Falls Howard Simmonds, pastor Sunday: 9:50 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 7 pm. Evening worship COUNTRY CHURCH Midway Four Corners. Table Rock rd. Ernest E. Ralls, pastor Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic service Wednesday: 7:45 p.m. Bible study and prayer FOREST ACRES COMMUNITY CHURCH Affiliated with American Sunday School Union (non-denominational) Seven miles north of Medford, 1 block east of Table Rock rd. Lester Wilcox Jr., pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 6:30 p.m. Young people's service GRIFFIN CREEK UNION SUNDAY SCHOOL (Non-denominational) Griffin Creek Grange Tyley O. Evans, pastor Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 ajn. Worship service 7 p.m. Bibleletics and Bible study Bovd Lawton home, rt. 1, box 398B, Medford Wednesday: 7:30 pm. Bible study and prayer time, Grange ROGUE VALLEY SPIRITUALIST CHURCH Route 1. Box 161. Gold Hill M. M. Kruse. D.D. Sunday: 8 p.m. Service SAMS VALLEY COMMUNITY CHURCH (Interdenominational) Schoolhouse H. A. Dierdorff. pastor Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship Wednesday: 8 p.m. Prayer and Bible study SAMS VALLEY GOSPEL CHURCH ( Interdenominational) Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship, Floyd Pollock, speaker 7:30 p.m. Regular service. Gordon petterson, speaKer Thursday: 7:30 p.m. Bible study and prayer. Two Valley Men Pass Engineers Examination Portland Robert Wayne Beadnell, Medford, and Ralph J. Ellis, Central Point, has passed the examination for professional engineering conducted by the state board of engineering ex aminers, according to E. A. Buckhorn, secretary. He announced that the next examination will be in March, 1958. Applications should be filed with the state board of exam iners, 717 board of trade build ing, Portland. WHY NOT 'AH-CHOO'? Santa Monica, Calif. (W Hospital staffers here have re volted against the. term Asian flu. Instead, they call it flu Manchu. Jf .JU.iaW jiu MOlUieaM&SM floor Alsynite Fiberglass with Metal Brackets 4 foot size $295 lyirlks GREEN STAMPS With Every Purchase 314 EAST MAIN for all your canvas needs SP 2-4472 GRANDVIEW-LONE PINE Grange Booster Night Set By LILLIAN KNIGHT Grandview-Lone Pine The Roxy Ann Grange will hold its annual "booster night'' Satur day at 8:30 p.m. at the Grange hall. An open house and a special program are planned. The pro gram will be under the direction of Mrs. Bruce Moffatt, lecturer of the Grange. Floor work will be shown and a general idea of Grange activities will be pre sented. The public has been in vited and the Grange ladies will serve refreshments. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tegard of Tacoma, Wash., stopped last week at the J. G. Cameron home Family Council Mrs. F. M. Sylvia will be left on the shelf. Sylvia M Dances are stupid and dates are rotten! Mrs. F. M. Unlike that of most mothers of 16-year-old girls my problem is my daughter takes no interest at all in boys. Syl via is attractive and has many girl friends, but as soon as the boys come around she walks away. I have tried to explain to her she must get used to being in the company of boys, but I haven't been able to make much headway. She says the boys are stupid and babyish and she can't talk to them. I tell her this is no attitude to take and she'll find herself on the shelf one of these days. I have asked some of Sylvia's friends to arrange dates for her, but she refused to go on them once the boys called. She wasn't invited to one of the school dances recently, so I had her father bring her and call for her. She said nobody asked her to dance and she hid in the lounge all evening. What can I do for her? Sylvia M I don't care what anyone says. Those boys at school really are stupid and babyish. I used to enjoy being with my girl friends, but now when the boys come around, the girls start acting as silly and stupid as the boys and I hate to be with any of them. Mother has embarrassed me so in front of all my friends, and even the whole school, I. wish I could die. My' friends all pity me and look at me as if I was a freak or something. When Moth er made me go to that dance, the boys all looked at me as if I had escaped from booby hatch. Who ever heard of a girl going to a dance without an escort? I don't care if I get left on the shelf! I don't care if I become an old maid. I'm not going to act like an idiot just to make boys like me and take me out. Dances are stupid and dates are rotten! I have the best times when I'm by myself. The Council: Mrs. F. M. asks what she can do for Sylvia, but she should ask first what she can do for herself in order to help Sylvia. The answer is she should first get over the notion that her daughter's life must follow a set pattern and schedule; secondly, she should get over the notion that courtship and marriage are institutions set up for the pur pose of saving girls from "the shelf;" and thirdly, she should recognize her daughter is a hu man being with feelings and a right to dignity and self-respect. Mrs. F. M. has approached her daughter's problems in the spirit of a person who tears open a rosebud in .order to make it into a full-blown rose. She has brutally humiliated Sylvia in front of her friends and frightened the girl into a panic with her threats of being "left on the shelf." Nowhere does Mrs. F. M. indicate she believes or wants Sylvia to believe social re lationship involving both sexes are fun, that they are a new, more grownup from of play. Sylvia is a little slow in devel oping an active interest in boys as such, but she probably has many interests which would bring her into contact with boys in a simple, natural way. She should be encouraged to ex'ercise her abilities in music, hobbies, club work anything that would distract her from her self-consciousness. Mrs. F. M. should cease stress ing the boy problem. If Sylvia is left free from fear and humlia tion, and allowed to develop as a person, she will find her way to happier relationships with boys and girls. (Copyright 1957. Gsneral Features Corp.) on their way home after being in a San Jose, Calif., hospital due to a car. accident last month near there. They were on their vacation. Mrs. Tegard still wears a cast on one leg. Keith Brothers Construction company now have their equip ment and crew of men on a job of road building for Copco near Dorris, Calif. Mrs. Dean Jacobs and chil dren of Birmingham, Ala., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Keith. Mrs. Keith and Dean Jacobs are sister and brother. Mrs. Kenneth Keith and Mrs. Dean Jacobs and children will leave Friday for Los Angeles, Calif., where they will visit their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lon Jacobs. Mr. and Mrs. Dick Knight are grandparents of a daughter born to the Rev. and Mrs. Martin Brown of Bridegview Thursday at Osteopathic hospital in Med ford. She weighed 7 pounds, 1334 ounces and has been named Marilyn Rose. Friday. October 11, 1957 MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN Camp White Man Example Of Employment Given on Basis of Ability To Work Jose Sanchez, a 55-year-old veteran of Mexican descent, is a good example of what can be done by a man who is employed on the basis of ability rather than disability. His case was pointed out today by officials at the Veterans administration domiciliary at Camp White in cooperation with National Em ploy the Handicapped week, now being observed. Sanchez, VA officials said, came to Camp White in January of 1957, a man broken in spirit by his inability to obtain em ployment because of his limited command of the English lang uage, a considerable problem of overweight, a diagnosis of ar terial hyper-tension and an ar rested case of tuberculosis. During his first few months at Camp White, Sanchez was given different activity assignments in an effort to find his work niche, officials said. In March Sanchez heard about available jobs in his GOLD HILL Council Hears Complaints By MRS. CLYDE KELL Gold Hill The city council this week asked police to inves tigate reports of firearms being discharged in Gold Hill, which have endangered residents. City Boys, Girls Aid Gels UMC Money (Editor's note: This is an other in a series of articles concerning agencies which re ceive funds through contribu tions to the United Medford Crusade, which is now con ducting its annual campaign. The Boys and Girls Aid Soci ety of Oregon is another one of 25 agencies which receive oper ating funds from contributions to the United Medford Crusade campaign. Typical of the society work is the story of Johnny and Carol who the society recently placed in new homes. When their mother died, the three and four year old chil dren's father found he could not spend the time of both a mother and father to take care of them. For a while they lived with their grandparents but they needed the care of "younger, healthier parents to care for them" accord ing to the grandmother. The grandparents asked the Boys and Ghls Aid Society to find a new home for the chil dren. The society found a new home by sifting through the many applications the society has on file. Last year 178 children were placed in adoption in 28 Oregon counties. Twenty-seven of these were brother-sister groups who were placed together. Temporary boarding care in foster home was provided by the society for more than 400 children and unmar ried mothers during the past year. Care for Jackson county boys and girls amounted to 4,262 days last year. Keating Returns From O&C Meeting .County Court Judge Rodney Keating returned Wednesday from an O and C meeting in Portland and Sweet Home. Monday and Tuesday the road committee of the group checked roads which have been built by the bureau of land management under the access road program. Wednesday the U.S. forest service and BLM representatives met with the O and C road and executive committees and dis cussed the joint road program of the tree agencies to correlate programs. Top priority item In the Ore gon area 1957 budget by BLM were the Powers to Agness ac cess road, according to Keating, and a Steves Creek road in the ADDleeate area, costing about $270,000. Also to be asked of ! Congress was $360,000 for an 18-mile stretch of road from Deadwood to Keno for the 1959 proposed budget, Keating said. Also meeting with the joint committees was Congressman Charles O. Porter. ordinances prohibit discharging firearms within the city limits, officials said. The council also heard com plaints that dogs have been do ing considerable damage to prop erty, but because there is no city ordinance requiring resi dents to keep dogs tied, no ac tion was taken. A letter from the state high way commission designating old Highway 99 as "Highway 99 Bus iness Route" was read. former home state of Wyoming and went there. Finding his handicaps stopped him from gaining emploment Wyoming, Sanchez returned to Camp White, more discouraged than ever, according to VA officials. Finally he was placed on the gardening staff of the domicil iary grounds and Sanchez began to "find himself." One of his proudest achievements was con verting a small marshland into an attractive lawn and garden. Having had previous exper ience as a boiler house helper, Sanchez asked for an opportun ity to work in the Camp White power house. When a vacancy occured there, he was accepted and is now "happy in his work and is a satisfactory employee," officials declared. It was another case of finding a place for a handicapped man, a job where his ability could be put to proper use, officials pointed out. BHEAKING THE ICE Cincinnati W Ten delegates to a national nursery education conference had a chance to get well acquainted here Thursday. They were stranded for half an hour in an elevator shaft when an overheated motor short-circuited. The life squad used a ladder to lead them to safety. HUNGARIAN HOUSING BAD Vienna, Austria OP) Com munist Hungary's building chief said today the Budapest housing shortage is the worst ever. Build ing Minister Rezsoe Trautmann said 200,000 persons were regis tered as "priority cases" in the Hungarian capital. This meant, he said, they do not have places of their own, but are receiving shelter from friends or relatives. Pussey Footing around for a Loan? Borrow the AMERICAN WAY LOANS $25 to $1,500 Auto Salary Furniture American Finance Corp. Phone SPring 2-8886 123 W. Main Medford Dancing classes will be offered beginning Monday, Oct. 14, be tween 7 and 9 p.m. in the Hanby school gym for students in the sixth, seventh and eighth grades. More than 50 per cent will start Oct. 14, according to those in charge of the lessons. No youngster will be admitted to the class without the parents' permission. Students must sub mit to their classroom teacher or the office a note of approval from their parents. All young sters entering the class must par- j ticipate. Instructors will be Claude j Morgan and Mrs. Mildred Black, i They will be assisted by chap- j erones. They include Mrs. Edsel White, Mrs. Beverley Rosecran, Mrs. Paul Molloy, and Mrs. Rob ert Schmidt. All parents are urged to participate in the pro gram. The dancing classes will con sist of 10 lessons. There will be no charge for the lessons. The instructors are donating their services. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Dickin sen have had as house guests in their home on Highway 99 north, the past three days his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dickinsen, of Pacoima, Calif., and their friend, A. H. Griffith, of San Diego, ; Calif. Johnny Price was to enter Sa cred Heart hospital Oct. 10 to undergo major surgery Oct. 11. He is a seventh grade student at Hanby school. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Truman O. Price. The Prices took their son, Tru man O. Price Jr., to Corvallis re cently, where he remained to enter Oregon State college. 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