Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, October 01, 1958, Image 2

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. J MAIL TJVf0f e,t9an- wni(hy. October T, 138
;Sisterhoc
;Annoures
: Lunch
of the PEO
Chapter
..bternood of Southern
; the fall lurflCil Saturday
Oregon c, 12;3o p M at
October 'Valley Country
; the 5mmiee in charge
" club. TJjng is Mrs F Wil
of the Mrs. W. E. Holmes,
son Wj. McPherson, Miss
Mrs. Gray, Mrs. Edward
" Anng Mrs. Fletcher Fish.
; Bol' Southern Oregon
; 7 is made up " of the
:- cojs in Roseburg, Grants
: cfcshland, Klamath Falls,
Bedford.
meeting will be con
ned by Mrs. D. E. Jones
'hapter BN, Ashland, pres
ut of the council. Mrs. L.
Emery, U. Klamath Falls,
vice-president, and Mrs.
iarjorie Olds, AA, Medford,
s secretary-treasurer.
i The president of each chap
iter will give a brief report
of her chapter's activities for
; the past year. The Dresidents
are Mrs. W. M. Campbell, BI,
Mrs. C. S. Woodrich, CU, both
of Roseburg; Mrs. R. H. Tub
man, AG. and Mrs. O. C. Un
rehill, CD, both of Grants
Pass; Mrs. Ross Ragland, U,
Miss Ruth Lobaugh, AU, Mrs.
David Bunger, CF, all of
Klamath Falls; Mrs. Elmer
Bradshaw, AC, and Mrs. Gor
don Pickell, BN, of Ashland;
Mrs. Robert Dames, AA, Mrs.
Allan Perry, BE, Mrs. K. S.
Campbell, CG, and Mrs. J. R.
Sanborn, CP, all of Medford.
The state president, Mrs.
E. E. Vehrs, Grants Pass, will
be present and will give a res
ume of the seminar held at
Cottey college, Nevada, Mis
souri, early in September.
New officers for the ensu
ing year will be elected from
the report of the nominating
committee, composed of Mrs.
O. C. Underhill, CD, chair
man, Mrs. K. S. Campbell,
CG, and Mrs. C. S. Woodrich,
CU.
Annual Candy Sale
Planned by Bethels
Members of valley bethels
of the International Order of
Job's Daughters will conduct
the annual candy sale Oc
tober 3 to 18 according to
Mrs. W. K. Suit, district chair
man. The sale is a state-wide
event.
The candy, a filbert roca,
will be on sale in a number of
banks, stores and other places
of business according to Mrs.
Suit. This is one of the Daugh
ter's major philanthropies,
and the greater part of the
fund raised will be used for
leukemia research at the Uni
versity of Oregon Medical
school.
OUR 48th YEAR
Tin All-New Wqy lo WoV I
NU-CURL 70
by
no-curl 70
HAIR CONDinONfR
GIVES A BETTER
CURL THAN A
PERMANENT!
Yes! Amazing NU-CUEL 70
makes hair want to wave by
impregnating' each strand with
nature's own curl activator. From
one pincurl setting, you get
waves and curls that last from
shampoo to shampoo!
So, transform dull, nnglamor
oos straight hair into a glorious
halo of waves and curls without
permanent waving or solutions
thafbake inor"fix" waves. Buy
NU-CURL 70 by Robert Curley.
AS SEEN
IN
plus tax
r no-curl 70 - i
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at :
I W.l
SI HAIR CONDtnONR
Member Gives
AutoBiography
At Club Session
Mrs. Jack Cummings, a
new member o f Medford
Toastmistress club, gave her
autobiography for the last
meeting of the organization,
held a t Girls Community
club. Mrs. C. K. Redmond,
President, conducted the
meeting.
Mrs. B e r n i c e Kunzman
spoke on "The Sad Story of
a Little Buff Sunbonnet," this
being an episode from the life
of her mother when the fam
ily crossed the plains in a
covered wagon. Mrs. Clarence
Rolls talked on "A- Trail in
the Woods," a recounting of
her first impression of the
Oregon forests.
Mrs. Ethel Mclntyre was
toastmistress; Mrs. E f f i e
Kurtz, topicmistress; M r s.
Wallace Haskins, program
evaluator; Mrs. Thomas Ball,
lexicologist; Mrs. Elmer Ness,
speech evaluator.
Mrs. Redmond, Mrs. Mcln
tyre, Mrs. Ness and Mrs.
James Vander Steen attended
the recent fall meeting of the
district council held in Grants
Pass. Mrs. Mclntyre was mod
erator fora panel discussion
on the duties of council of
ficers in which . Mrs. Vander
Steen and Mrs. Ness took
part.
Next meeting of the Med
ford club will be October 8
at Girls Community club.
Group Reporters
To Be Honored
A group of club representa
tives will be honored at the
eighth annual reporters'
school which the women's de
partment of The Medford
Mail Tribune will hold next
week. It is set for Tuesday,
October 7, at 2 p.m. at Girls'
Community club.
For the past few years the
women's editor of The Trib
une has followed the custom
of introducing some of the re
porters who have turned in
exceptionally good copy or
who have been of unusual
service to the groups they
represent.
During the school staff
members will discuss the
proper preparation of copy, a
question and answer period
will be held and the program
will close with a tea.
Son Here
James Lattie spent the week
end in the valley with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin
Lattie, North Phoenix road.
The young man, who former
ly was with Station KBES-TV
as a photographer-reporter, is
now serving as a public rela
tions man for Congressman
Hubert B. Scudder of Califor
nia. He plans to return to
Jackson county following the
genera.I election.
SPECIAL
FOR OUR
ANNIVERSARY
Miss Wolfkill, a
representative of
Robert Curley Hair
Care is now at
Mann's and will
be here thru Oct.
4th. Miss Wolfkill'
will demonstrate
and tell you how to
keep your hair
always beautifully
styled ... No
appointment
necessary. Don't
miss this opportu
nity to have a
NEW hair style in
a minute ...
anytime you
please.
COSMETICS DEPT.
MAIN FLOOR
Annual Mission
Conducted by
Books which women of Pro
testant churches will study
! this fall and winter were re
l viewed at the annual mission
institute of Medford Council
of United Church Women,
held September 26 in East
wood Baptist church. Mrs.
Everett Faber, Central Point,
presided and Mrs. William
Ricken opened the program
with devotions. '
Those briefing books and
books discussed were: "Mid
dle East Pilgrimage,". Mrs.
William Ricken; "New Voic
es, Old Worlds," Mrs. William
Piper; "The Lands Between,"
Gardeners Name
New President;
Session Planned
Crater . Garden club held
a potluck supper at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S.
Taylor recently to open the
new year.
During the business meet
ing Mrs. Carroll Stevenson
was elected president of the
club to take the place of Mrs.
Thomas Smith, who resigned.
Also elected was Charles S.
Taylor as historian. They,
along with Delmar Smith,
vice - president; Mrs. Arthur
L. Straus, secretary; and Mrs.
Gladys Mesal, treasurer, were
installed by Mrs. C. W. An
horn. Mr. Anhorn was- also a
guest during the evening and
won a prize.
The meeting night of the
club was changed from the
third Tuesday of the month
to the first Thursday.
D. L. Smith showed pic
tures of landscaping in dif
ferent types of gardens such
as the Lambert Gardens in
Portland, and uses of rocks
in Petersons' Gardens in
Bend, Ore.
The next meeting of the
club will be Thursday, Octo
ber 2, at 7:30 p. m. at the
home of Mrs. Carroll Steven
son, Willow Springs road
North of Central Point.
Mrs. Nell Faulkner of the
Ornamental Nursery will dis
cuss ornamentals, including
camellias and rhododendrons.
New projects and lessons for
the year will be presented.
This is one of the few gar
den clubs in the county that
meet in the evening and both
men and women are welcome
to attend as it is open to any
one in the county. Interested
persons may phone Mrs. Ste
venson at NOrmandy '4-2835
or Mrs. Charles S. Taylor,
NOrmandy 4-2928.
Sessions Resumed
By Eiecta Club
Electa Social club held the
first sesion since the annual
summer vacation at Girls'
Community club September
26.
Dessert was served at 1
o'clock by a committee com
posed of the Mesdames Clara
Franklin, Maude Lovell, Nina
Chandler and Lydia Ash. Mrs.
Chandler, the president, con
ducted a business meeting
and cards concluded the after
noon. Electa club was organized
many years ago for the pur
pose of welcoming newcomers
to the community who are
members of the Order of
Eastern Star. The club meets
the fourth Friday of each
month.
The club will meet Octobe
24 at 12:30 p.m. for a potluck
luncheon.
CALENDAR
Wednesday:
7:30 p.m. Griffin Creek
Mothers club, school gymna
sium. 6 p.m.-International Order
of Job's Daughters, Bethel 14,
Masonic temple.
8 p.m. - AAUW, home of
Mrs. Berwick Wood, 2445
East Main st. .
8 p.m.-Eagle Point PTSA,
high school library.
8 p.m. - Southern Oregon
Mushroom club, Bed Cross
bldg.
8 p.m.-Veterans of World
War I auxiliary and barracks,
Girls Community club,
8 p.m.-Xi Mu chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi, home of Miss
Anna May, 3444 Forest ave
nue. Thursday:
10:45 a.m.-West Side Home
Extension unit, Central Point
Grange, hall. :
1:30 p.m.-Sams Valley La
dies club, home of Mrs. Earl
Bigham, Webber rd.
r YOU SAID A
:
u.m.u M.iu-i kuu.u-k
Institute
Church Women
Mrs. Lyle Schoppert: "A Tool
in His Hand," Mrs. Fred
Daugherty; "Caught in the
Middle," Mrs. C. Weldon
Kline; "Multitudes in the Val
ley," Mrs. Reta Miller; "Pearls
Are Made," Mrs. Fred Mast;
"They Live in Bible Lands,"
Mrs. Maurice Tuttle; 'The
Thirsty Village," Mrs. Leon
Yandell.
These books were concerned
with peoples of the Middle
East and others considered
Christian concerns of North
American Neighbors.
Books under the second
heading and women who
briefed them were, "Concerns
of a Continent," Mrs. Everett
Lasher; "The Shadows They
Cast," Mrs. George Roseberry;
"This Is North America,"
Mrs. C. C. Stearns; "This Is
the Migrant," Mrs. C. L. Mil
ler; "What Concerns Amer
ican Youth," Mrs. G. C. Cor
um; "Always an Answer,"
Mrs. J. Claude Sparks; "Ten
Pairs of Shoes," Mrs. John
Reed; "Leo, of Alaska," Mrs.
William Root; "Flaco, of Mex
ico," Mrs. Wayne . Troxell;
"Mateo, of Mexico," Mrs.
Charles Thompson.
Maps and several children's
books were grouped as a unit
and presented by Mrs. Wayne
Troxell.
At noon the Rev. Richard
Jones of the hostess church,
gave the table devotions. Mrs.
Harlan P. Bosworth Jr. told of
the United Nations activities
and announced meetings to be
held soon.
Mrs. Wayne Troxell, chair
man, conducted the program
hour held in the sanctuary of
the church. The Rev. Richard
Jones gave the opening devo
tions and Mrs. Charles
Champlin sang, accompanied
by Mrs. A. Anderson.
The newly arrived minister
of the Zion Lutheran church,
the Rev. H. C. Coovert, was
the afternoon speaker taking
as his topic "Alaska" where
he spent the past six years at
Juneau.
The Revl Mr. Coovert stated
that the Lutheran and Cath
olic churches have done most
of the work which has been
carried on among the Eski
mos. In most of Alaska one
finds . Indians and working
with them are Presbyterian,
Methodist, Episcopalian and
Salvation Army groups.
Educational facilities are
excellent, according to the
speaker. A college is located
at Fairbanks and one is to be.
built at Anchorage. Travel is
either by boat or plane for
travel by car is not possible
due to the rugged and narrow
roads or the complete absence
of roads.
The Lutheran church is the
oldest : established church in
Alaska, stated the Rev. Mr.
Coovert, and strangely
enough, the Russians donated
the land upon which the
church stands.
The speaker advised
against going to Alaska for, he
stated, there are no jobs and
prices are very high on all
commodities. Perhaps no
place has more beautiful
scenery than has Alaska,
which he and Mrs. Coovert
explained in the showing of
some interesting slides of that
country.
Unusual Plant
In Bloom Here
' Mrs. May Ayres of 722 West
Fourth street has a ginger
plant blooming in her garden,
it was reported yesterday.
The plant, ordinarily grown
in sub-tropical and tropical
climates, is much admired for
its white blossoms and un
usual fragrance.
The plant was brought to
Medford by - Mrs. Ayres
daughter, Mrs. Edward Ca
noose, who also planted one
in her own garden. The two
plants lived over last winter,
but that grown by Mrs. Ca
noose has failed to bloom.
The two women have no
idea how. long the blooming
period will continue, and
Mrs. Canoose added that the
flower is not the usual long
spike which those grown in
southern California and Ha
waii produce.
Leaves
Mrs. Kenneth Bitney, Riv
erside, Calif., left - for her
home last night after spending
two weeks with Mr. and Mrs.
B. L. Sanderson, South Holly
street,- and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Sanderson, Sams Val
ley. Mrs. Bitney is a cousin of
the two men.
MOUTHFUL!
Tl
I
a a i I
Pop Corn
i.HirarCTrcnrar - Wiiii
Eagle Point
PTA Opens
New Year
Eagle Point First meeting
of fall for Eagle Point Ele
mentary Parent-Teacher asso
ciation followed a potluck
supper September 23 in the
grade school cafeteria.. Mar
tin Jorde, president, ex
pressed gratification at the
large attendance, and Mrs.
Jorde, membership chairman,
reported that 71 persons
joined the association at its
first meeting.
Teachers were introduced
and Mrs. Vera Selby's class
won the room count for hav
ing the most parents present.
Chairman have been ap
pointed for the coming year.
They are, program, Mrs. Joe
Shelton and James Collier;
PTA Magazine, Mrs. Ray
Palm; family life, the Rev.
Joseph Munshaw; Founders'
day, Mrs. Elsie Turner; tui
tion scholarship, James Col
lier; health, Mrs. Oscar Frei
and Mrs. Arnold Arens; mem
bership, Mrs. Martin Jorde
and Mrs. Robert Bever; hos
pitality, Mrs. S. Clave; Ways
and Means, Cecil Wade; legis
lation, G. Lee Hayes.
Safety, Richard Wolgamott;
music, Mrs. Keith Krambeal;
library, Mrs. James Wallis;
juvenile protection, Mrs. John
Huffman; publicity, Mrs.
Robert Meyer. Mrs. William
Pomerey will serve as parlia
mentarian; Mrs. John B. John
son will be room representa
tive for ihe upper grades, and
Mrs. Virgil Miller for the
lower grades.
Mrs. Clave, hospitality
chairman, announced that
Mrs. William Pomeroy's fifth
grade class and Mrs. S. W.
Callaghan's fourth grade class
made the colorful paper au
tumn leaves that were used as
name tags and also the paper
"green-horns" that were given
to all teachers new to the
school this year.
The regular meetings of the
association will be held on
the fourth Tuesday of each
month; the next meeting will
be October 28.
Hospital Guild
Slates Meeting
Providence guild of Sacrad
Heart hospital will meet on
Thursday, October 2, at the
hospital social room. The
guild, on vacation during the
summer months, is now. re
suming activities.
Mrs. Robert Duff is presi
dent. Many of the cables that
span the oceans are less than
an inch thick.
OOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO
: WHICH
: Wash-n-Wear
OWILL TURN DIRTY YELLOW
fed
ft l
w . - i
ok ;
oieacnea
tion of original whiteness.
O
O
o
According to American
of Laundering, inferior wash-n-wear
garments may be made with certain ;
resin finishes that absorb chlorine from
O hypochlorite bleach, commonly used. '
0' This can't rinse out and heat from
ironing creates an acid which yellows
or destroys the fabric.
0 If you buy wash-n-weor or other
A washables, be sure they carry the
9 CERTIFIED WASHABLE SEAL of
American Institute of Laundering. It
O certifies wt can launder them to per
0 fection.
0 SEND ALL YOUR WASHABLES TO US
You'll Like Our Professional Touch
BE SURE TO
TRY OUR
10 lbs. $120
Each Additional Pound 10c
With this strvict, itMn't shirts fully laundered at
radueed prict, and avary shirt callo packaged.
Phena SP 2-6165 for Free Pickup and Delivery
0 0 0000000000000 0
MEDFORD
LAifltMY I DRY CLEANERS
30-32 N. Riverside
Doctor Says Fashion Plates
Are Bored or Boring Women
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
United Press International
New York (LTD A medical
historian male has come
up with possibly fightin' and
frightening words about
fashion.
Dr. - F el i x Marti Ibanez
does so fearlessly. Ever since
Eve reached for something
more stylish than a fig leaf,
it has been a doctor's prerog
ative to ponder fashion in
the interest of physical and
mental health.
Hippocrates author of the
oath doctors take s c 0 1 d e d
f emmes of his time for squeez
ing their rib cages with waist
bands. Claimed respiration
suffered.
Bored and Boring
Of fashions, in general, Dr.
Marti-Ibanez, head of the His
tory of Medicine Department
at New York Medical college,
says:
The woman who blindly
adopts every fashion does so
because fashion bolsters a
weak individuality.
Fashion plates usually
are bored and boring females.
The fashion plate makes
fashion a hard and constant
slave, trotting from place to
place so that men and more
Methodist Wo
Against Capita
Medford delegates report
that a recommendation that
capital punishment be taken
from the statute books of
Oregon was approved by the
executive committee of the
Woman's Society of Christian
Service, Oregon Conference
of the Methodist church,v at
the fall meeting in Forest
Grove, September 26. Mrs.
C. R. Adamson, Mrs. George
Lawless and Mrs. O. P. Taylor
attended from Medford.
The recommendation a s
presented ' by ' Mrs. Wayne
Stauffer, Eugene, sercretary
of Christian social relations,
reads: "Whereas we stand for
the application of the redemp
tive principle of Christian
love to the treatment of of
fenders against the law, we,
the members of the executive
committee of the Woman's
Society of Christian . Service
of the Methodist church, de
plore the use of capital pun
ishment and duly recommend
that it be taken from the sta
tute books of the state of Ore
gon." ' It was announced that the
oratorical contest, sponsored
annually by the Society for
e
o
o
e
Select Wash-n-Wear 0
Shirts Carefully ... 0
if you choose to buy them. One brand A
I may launder satisfactorily. Another q
f may turn dirty yellow or fall apart. '
'! This may happen td dress or sport
I shirts, blouses, work or play clothes,
' nr other wach-n-wear fabrics and par- A
jr ments, white or colored, normally 0
ior stain removal ana reten
Institute
Finish
ALL FLAT PIECES
FINISHED
r-B-
and Beautiful
Dry Cleaning
"AS IF BY 'MAGIC
Medford, Oregon
o
to
o
Ii o
0
O
o
o
important women, notice
her.
Among points made by the
medical historian in a medical
publication, MD, is this -one
that males might file for fu
ture reference:
Historically, whenever
woman has dominated, she
has abbreviated her apparel,
stripping off everything that
might hinder action.
Nothing New
The medical historian finds
nothing really new about the
trapeze. An important wom
an called "Mistress of Ani
mals" wore such a thing in
1000 B.C. A statue of her in
the Paris Lourye proves.it.
If recent interest in the tra
peze is a sign fashion is re
gressing, a garment called the
minoan should be the rage by
2800 A.D. And -if it is, the
common cold will have a field
day. - -
For the minoan, popular in
1800 B.C., featured , the re
verse of the bare back.
The way Dr. Marti-Ibanez
looks at fashion, the whole
complex subject is the result
of social and sexual competi
tion. And women's styles have
met the competition with a
succession of fashionable exposures.
men Legislate
I Punishment
1 1 h e Methodist Fellowship,
would have as its theme
"Reaching Beyond Our
selves." The contest will be
gin, in the local youth groups
in December and speak-offs
on a sub-district level will be
in January. Winner for the
state will be chosen at the dis
trict conferences in February.
Purpose of the contest is to
promote interest of youth in
a life work
The conference program
committee, with Mrs. R. O.
Watson, Portland, chairman,
met to lay plans for the an
nual meeting of the Woman's
Society - whitri will be held
May 7 and 8, 1959, in Hills
boro. Mrs. L. A. Walworth, Sa
lem, president of the Oregon
conference, announced that
officers would be in Port
land this fall to make prelim
inary arrangements for the
western jurisdiction meeting
of the Woman's , Society ; of
Christian Service to be held
in Portland in October 1959.
Social Season
Opens With
Hula -Hoops
By FREDERICK M. WINSHIP
United Press International
New York-flJPD-Internation-
al society hula-hopped it up
at the Astor Tuesday night to
open what promises to be" the
most lavish social season since
World War II.
Deluxe red, yellow and blue
hoops costing $1.75 swiveled
around the hips of 1,000 social
ites, many of them multi-mil
lionaires, in the wackiest post
midnight scene in the history
of the venerable Astor Hotel
on Times Square. It was the
first of the balls, debuts, and
charity events that will put
an estimated 10 million dol
lars in circulation in the next j
eight months. . , , . j
The hoops were passed out
to Rockefellers, , Whitneys,
Chryslers, Dukes, Mellons,
Du Ponts and Biddies at the
climax of the Astor Ball, an
event marking the reopening
of the 54-year-old hotel s ball
room to the New York car
riage ' trade after years of
social oblivion due to its West
Side location. Almost every
one except Elsa Maxwell gave
the hoop the whirl.
"I won't make an exhibition
of myself," said Elsa as she
slipped out early for an ap
pearance on a television show.
The international set, in
cluding Generalissimo Fran
cisco Franco's daughter, Mar
ques de Villaverde, handled
the hoops timidly at first.
Then Eleanor Whitney, di
vorced wife of Cornelius Van-
derbilt .Whitney, broke , the
ice by lassoing Aly Khan in
her hoop for a whirl around
the ballroom. ; j
Merle Oberon, Jane Pick
ens, Carol Bruce, .Magda Ga
bor and Gypsy Rose Lee fol
lowed suit and it soou looked
like a' school playground at
recess. Side-line dowagers
riuch as Mrs. Wendell Wilkie
and the Duchess of Talleyrand
carried off hoops by the half-dozen-f
or their grandchildren,
they said.- The hoops looked
incongruous - over their dia-mond-braceleted
arms.
The ball was the idea of
former White Russian Prince
Serge Obolensky, who had
the good fortune to marry an
Astor heiress and become a
hotel executive in the recent
ly organized Zeckendorf hotel
chain. It netted $25,000 for
the New York Herald Tribune
Fresh Air Fund for under
privileged children. That will
( 1 1 f-7
The Cornsr Shot Storr
CENTRAL AT MAIN MEDFORD
Open Monday Evenings Until 9 p.m.
DASHING As dashtna; look
ing as your favorite low-alune;
sports car Is this at-home coat
styled by Gertrude Davenport
in emerald green cotton terry -cloth.
Deep tab pockets are
both functional and decora
tive. . '
A post script for the fash
ion minded: the empire fash
ion has not caught on among
women who can afford to fol
low fashion's whims. The pre
dominant style at the ball was
a knee-length gown with fitted
front and longer floating panel
back, in various shades of
green.
4 '
Plastic upholstery is more
durable if fabric-backed or on
an elastic base. Unsupported it
is pasv to vninetiirp and hrfak.
LADIES
Adah Ward, .
Doris Chavis,
Babe McCoy and
Lynda Sechler
are taking appoint
ments for distinctive hair
styling, permanent wav
ing and. all phases of
beauty work at reason
able prices, for all age
groups, at -
Virginia's
Big Y
Beauty Salon
(Across from the Big Y .
Shopping Center)
ELVA PENWELL, Owner
Drop In or Phone SP 2-9380
for . Appointment
. Open 8 a.m. 6 Days Week
FREE PARKING
Half Ma d
Smart new sport shoe saddled
on one side ... plain on the
other. Buoyant trepe soles
and clever "hook and line"
lacing. Good sports that will
add their special spirit to
your pleated skirt, your
Bermudas, or car coat.-.,
and give you that Life Stride
Xook of Perfection. '
White Buck
Black Buck
$795
westports
by
Advertised lit ..-MADEMOISELLE
I
I rl . i I
ipjlili