Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, November 05, 1957, Image 3

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ClUD
DIPS
Westside Shwtp Club
The Westside Sheep club met i
Saturday. Parts of sheep were
identified by the members and
sheep varieties were named.
The"; meeting was adjourned
following a discussion on sheep.
Princess Fashion
Mpwffpawww)! .j j ' ' , 1111
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BEING DISPLAYED The 1958 Chevrolet, which went on dis
play at Courtesy Chevrolet, 227 East Ninth st., Medford, recent
ly, features a new engine, new frame and two new suspension
systems. The showing drew large crowds last week, company of
ficials said. The new model has strong eye appeal in its modish
grille, dual headlamps, and low, flat hood. Models are available
in the station wagon, Bel Air, Biscayne and Delray series.
CENTRAL POINT
Seven Attend Conference
r9183 10-20
0 bw Iffa
YouTl live in and love this
jumper ensemble. Especially
easy to sew with our Printed
Pattern. No waist seams to the
jumper it has such flattering
princess lines.
Printed Pattern 9183: Misses'
Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20. Size
16 jumper takes 334 yards 39-
oinch fabric; blouse 1& yards.
Printed directions on each
pattern part. Easier, accurate.
SendT Thirty-Five Cents (coins)
for this pattern add 5 cents for
each pattern for lst-class mail
ing. Send to Marian Martin, caw
of Medford Mail Tribune Pat
tern Dept., 232 West 18th st.,
New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly
NAME. ADDRESS with SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
It requires an investment of
not less than S8,000 to create
job for an average worker in
an industrial plant.
By DORIS HUGHES
Central Point Seven mem
bers of the Crater High school
speech class with their leader,
Donald Lacy, recently went to
the University of Oregon at
Eugene to attend the Oregon
State Broadcasters association
speech conference.
Attending were Jean Bonney,
Jocky Cameron, Joan Dobrot,
Eill Layton, Bob Lichti, Phyllis
Taylor and Louise Pendelton.
The conference, an all-day
session, started at 9 a.m. with
the preparation of the three
production which were present
ed in the afternoon. The fir w
a TV and radio panel discussion,
the second was a variety pro
gram and the third was news
analysis and presentation.
Two Crater High school stu
dents participated in the final
productions. They were Bill
Layton on the news Qrogram
and Joan Dobrot in the drama
on the variety program. There
were about 195 students from
Oregon attending the conference.
The students of the speech
department at Crater High
school put on a weekly radio
show each Wednesday from 8
to 9 p.m. on station KWIN, Ashland.
A Webelos Den has been or
ganized in Central Point this
fall. The Webelos leader is Ches
ter Ricks of Beal lane. The pur
pose of the Webelos is to help
the Cub Scout to become famil
iar with the itays of the Boy
Scouts in preparation for becom
ing a Scout.
Scout.
The Cub Scout Den Mothers
in Central Point area for this
year are Mrs. Kenneth Toner,
Mrs. George Ray, Mrs. Vernon
Caldwell, Mrs. Ralph Mundlin,
Mrs. Everett Grissom, Mrs. Ted
Donner, Mrs. Alice Lopez, Mrs.
Dominic Tate. Mrs. Jim Pierce.
Mrs. D. C. Mapel, Mrs. Harold
Wilson, and Mrs. Harold
Wright.
One hundred and seventy one
students of Central Point Junior
high school went by bus, Mon
day evening, to the roller rink
in Grants Pass. The students had
voted to have a skating party in
stead of having Halloween
parties in the rooms last Thursday.
Students of all of the Central
Point schools will be given the
third polio shot at the schools
about Nov. 18. All students may
have the shot regardless of
where the other two have been
given, according to the school
principals.
Rollie Armstrong, son of Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Armstrong,
is reported to be improved. He
was injured in an automobile
accident Friday evening.
Halloween parties were held
in the class rooms at the Jewett
elementary and the Central
Point elementary school Thurs
day. There were style shows,
prizes, games and treats forthe
children. Room mothers ' as
sisted with the parties.
Arthus Straus, principal, an
nounced that the Crater High
school Annual has arrived and
although the majority have been
distributed, those who have not
received theirs, may do so by
calling at the school.
Straus also announced that a
followup study of Crater High
school graduates of 1954 is
underway. The st. dy is state-
t St' vests'. !"f jfe;
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So wonderful and not?... and paid for
...When you cqyo urith uo
That shiny new ej is even more wonderful when it's aU yours because you saved for it.
And whatl,great feeling, knowing therell be no future payments to cut
into your pay check.
Today, saving is the wisest, cheapest way of getting the things you want. Here, for
instance, is a painless way to pay for that new car : Every time you drive a hundred miles,
place $5.00 in a savings account with us. When you get ready to turn in your car, youH
have money to make up the trade-in difference . . . without costly borrowing.
Save for anything you want the easy Insured Savings and Loan Way.
Returns on your money are excellent. Your savings are insured
up to $10,000 by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation. Stop by and open your account this week.
Whero you save doss mako a difference
Investments made by the 10th of the month eare dividends s ? the first
72 Q " ANNUM
MEMBER I
SAVINGS AND 10AM I
FOOMBATWa I
CURRENT DIVIDEND
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FIRST FEDERAL
Siiiii Ltf 1 Ati. if Decr
39 Kortb Ity . F. Kyt, f raakbnt
wide. Graduates of the clas!? of
11954 are asked to contract the
school.
George Johns, principal of
Jewett elementary school, re
minded parents there would be
no school Monday, which is Vet
erans Days.
Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Scott of
Beal lane had as dinner guests
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Glenn
Higinbotham and children, Ivan,
Sheila and Loyal, and Miss
Sharon Thompson.
Jerva Wynn of Los Angeles
is visitfng his friend, Frank
Scott, at the Les Scott home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray G. Ekdahl
spent last week end in Portland.
Ohio has 145 cities whose
population is more than 5,000
persons.
Wreck on Mew 6.P.
Freeuiy Kills Mm
Grants Pass d") Howard
R. Newfon, about 40, of Cres
well, was killed early today in
a one-car accident a mile north
of here.
It was the first fatality on the
new Highway 99 freeway in
Josephine county.
Coroner Virgil Hull said New
ton's 1955 convertible left the
freeway 520 feet north of where
the car came to rest. The victim
was thrown through the top and
was found about 20 feet from
the car.
Hull said Newton, who is sur
vived by his widow and two
children in Creswell, was en
route to California to visit a
brother who is seriously ill.
Tuesday, November 5, 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE THREE
THURSDAY, A GOOD TIME
Chapel Hill, N.C. flfl The
manager of the University of
North Carolina Planetarium said
Monday a . lunar eclipse sched
uled for Nov. 7, the 40th anni
versary of the Bolshevik revolu
tion, would offer ideal condi
tions for viewing any explosion
set off by a Russian rocket
reaching the moon. A. F. Jen
zano commented on a statement
by Dr. Fred-Whipple, of the
Smith sonian Observatory in
Cambride, Mass., that it was
possible the Russians launched
a moon-bound rocket last Saturday.
DODGERS SIGN PITCHER
Los Angeles IP! Tom Mc
Caig, a 20-year-old right handed
pitcher from Alhambra, Calif.,
has been signed by the Los An
geles Dodgers. He will report
to the Victoria Club in the Big
State League next spring.
O
HORSES TO TRAVEL
Camden, N.J. (IP) Trainer
Jim Jordan has" shipped 16 horses
from his stable to Golden Gate
fields in California, while Mrs.
Ada L. Rice hps ciioJ ' -
Band and Buddy from Garden
State to Laurel.
Although some marine engines
weigh hundreds of tons, many
of their parts are made accurate
to a thickness of about one-30th
of a human hair.
PERSONALIZED
Christmas Cards
ORDER NOW
35 ALBUMS TO CHOOSE FROM ON THE BALCONY
OOKS-GIFTS RECORDS
ft -IS'
L
j OTVcM DAND TEST ' ' j
Betty Fumes ihows clean towels tken from Westinghous 2 : ; sS'lP SU
Liundromat at conclusion of dramatic Sand Test of 1958 auto- I " ' M Wm mm 5tl
? - matic vashers. Compare these towels with those taken from ; 9 fp's 8S8 &f$Wj&. 'l
: : lttding center-poet automatics used in the test. yy ' S J 1? fiuftfk
Beakers were used to catch waih and rinse water from each ! ' lrT Tl 1
machine, and special traps collected sand pumped out by etch ( i - 1 jfpliv i
I t machine durinf test. " " 1 X??
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Monday Night, Nov. 4th "Studio Ono' Sgnd Tgst Proves Again:
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Washes Cleaner, Rinses Better, Cleans Itself!
h J rmtic lest performed before a live studio audience, the
Westinghouse Laundromat proved once again that it still holds
the world's washing championship.
Two cups of dirty sand to represent everyday soil were dumped
on towels in the Laundromat Automatic Washer and in three
other well-known '58 automatic washers. At the end of their
washing cycles not a grain of sand remained in the Laundromat's
towels or in the machine either. Towels in the other washers
were streaked with sand and there was also sand left in the
machines. What's more, the Laundromat did this cleaner job
with gallons less water.
LAUNDROMAT
SAVES GALLONS OF WATER
Diagrams below shew ralativ
amounts of water used.
WBtifX wtal WtUwl
' LAUNDROMAT ALONE
WASHES OUT All THE SAND
Diagrams ttolow show relative
amounts of sand washad out.
Wntintfioint CnHr snt twtsr tst
Imtitml Wuiw X WisKst 1
WaslurZ
HERE'S WHY THE REVOLVING AGITATOR LAUNDROMAT
WINS THE 8ANO TEST I
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In the Laundromat,
clothes go inside Re
volving Agitator that
lifts, turns, plunges
them 50 times a min
ute, washes each piece
equally well all the
time. Lift-Away rinsing drains dirty
wash water away from clothes never
back through them.
Center-post machines
give clothes bunched
around the agitator
harsh treatment while
those at outer edge
of tub get almost no
washing. During rins
ing, dirty wash water strains back
through clothes, redeposits sand. soil,
lint and scum on the washed fabrics.
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w.'.w.yjv.'.'Xviyi-lv
A WESTINGHOUSE LAUNDRY FOR EVERY NEED:
M
Combination
lmprltl Twins Royal Twins
Dolus)
Spa co -Mats
YOU CAN BE SURE
...IF ITS
See the NEW 1958
Westinghouse Laundromat at ...
TBOHBBIDfiE ft FLVClfJ
214 WI5T MAIN STREET
AND
rana h nm.to.n nrnnc uranmy
PHONE SP 3-6241
THE 0
IN THE BIG Y SHOPPING CENTER
PHONE SP 3-3052
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