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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 11, 1958)
2 MAIL TRIBUNE, MedforcJ, Oregon, Tuesday, November 11, 1958 VFW Auxiliary To Receive i Visit From National Head The national president of "the Ladies' auxiliary to the ; Veterans of Foreign Wars will be a visitor in Jackson : and Josephine counties No f vember 15-16. The officer, r'Mrs. Leedy (Belle) Myers, i Grest Bend, Kan., will be hon 1 ored at a dinner and dance in 'the VFW hall Crants Pass, Saturday night and will visit Tthe Camp White domiciliary Sunday afternoon. , ;- This will constitute her of ficial visit to the department t'of Oregon. The department president, Miss Laurene Kell, : Medford. is a member of the ;.Grants Pass auxiliary which ; will sponsor the events in that - city Saturday night. During her visit in the Rogue valley Mrs. Myers will ', stress her project for the year, which is the auxiliary's fund ;-for cancer aid and research. ;"Mrs. Myers calls this project :"the organization's most : worthwhile effort." 'Goal Set She has set the goal for the ''1958-59 cancer fund at . $325,000 which equals one dollar per member. The fund, -started 10 years ago, is built ' by voluntary contributions . from auxiliary members. Since 1948 members have giv en $737,575, of which $580, 000 has been granted to ap . proved institutions doing re search on cancer. In the same time, $184,000 has been re lumed outright to auxiliary members who are suffering with cancer, to help pay for operations and other medical expenses. Auxiliary members annual ly give more than 3 million dollars, and devote thousands of volunteer hours, to many other programs for hospital . lzed veterans and their fami lies, community service, Americanism education, youth - groups, civil defense and vet ' erans' legslation, and contrib- tite heavily to the multi-mil- ilon dollar V.F.W. National . Home at Eaton Rapids, Mich., '. for the chidren of deceased or disabled veterans. Eligible for membership ' are the wives, mothers, sisters, ". daughters and widows of vet- erans who have served over seas in the U.S. armed forces, ' or women who have them selves had overseas service. There are Auxiliary units in - all the states, the District of ; Columbia, Alaska, Hawaii, I. and the Canal Zone. V Despite the Auxiliary's im- pressive national record to date, Mrs. Myers believes that ; the organization will reach a ; new high mark in 1958-59. New Fields Open "In fact, in our 45th year '. as a service organization, our I work has really just begun," I she says "New techniques in the mental health field, for in j stance, require even more ; trained volunteers for VA hospitals and in rehabilitation " work. We will need the help of all our members-and many TV All-Star Jazz Show Said Likely To Kill Off Growing Interest in Jazz By WILLIAM EWALD UPI Correspondent v - New York ffiPD I can't : think of anything more likely - to kill off this nation's grow- ?'." ing interest in jazz than TVs all -star jazz shows. Monday C 1 ,'1 night. CBS It 1 TVs' "Timex t&Tf All- Star Jazz h I Show" made trek into the William Eald jazz deli catessen and came up with a curious antipasto made up of the Chico Hamilton quintet, '. Hoagy Carmichael, Louis . Armstrong, Anita O'Day, Bob Crosby, Jaye Morgan and ; Gene Krupa. They, in turn, '. made a curious assortment of 'noises. : Beamed from Hotel To compound the difficulty 'the show was beamed from J the pretentious hollow of a Miami Beach hotel, surround- ings more suited to the quar .ter finals of a cha-cha con test than a jazz recital. As, a result, the actual sound of -the show was terrible shal l low and muddy. : Like all of these TV jazz excursions there were a few nuggets to be had for the dig iging notably the skittering .through a couple of chamber pieces by the Hamilton group and a skat flight through the !"Four Brothers" by Anita ; O'Day. ; But the bulk of the show was just plain, blah. It had -"the look and feel of some- thing put together by an ad agency man whose musical .taste atrophied in the early S1940's. .Not Related Much of' the hour was not remotely related to the jazz Afield: Hoagy Carmichael sing Ling "Buttermilk Sky," the :Jimp mouthings of . the Les Mrs. Leedy (Belle) Myers, Great Bend, Kan., rational president of the Ladies' auxil iary to Veterans of Foreign Wars, will make an official visit in Jackson and Jose phine counties November 15 16. Mrs. Myers will also be honored at the Camp White domiciliary Sunday after noon. new ones besides to fulfill our obligations as good citi zens at this critical time, in oui nation's history." Mrs. Myers joined the Aux iliary through the overseas service of her husband in World War I. The couple has cne son, B. L. Myers of Dallas, who served as an Air Force gunner in World War II, and five grandchildren Meeting Planned By Hedrick PTA .. Hedrick Junior High School Parent -Teacher association will hold the first meeting of the year Monday, Novem ber 24, according to Wardell Shackleford, president. Offi cers of the unit and teachers new to the staff will be intro duced. Assisting Mr. Shackleford as president are Mrs. David Irving, vice-president; Mrs. Thomas N. Eaton, treasurer; Otis D. Swisher, secretary. Committee charmen have been selected. They are Ray Johnson, publicity; Vincent Bevis, program; Mrs. Violet Ayres, membership; Mrs. S. V. McQueen, welfare; Tom Ness, safety; Dr. Robert H. Reichers, health; Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Taylor, hospitality; Mrs. A. J. Johannson, room representative; Mrs. Mary Tungate, historian; Mrs. Rob ert Dames, parliamentarian; Mrs. G. T. Haupert, maga zine; Glenn McCullough and Monte Kounz, legislation; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Gastineau and Mr. and Mrs. Earl Rich ardson, ways and means; Mr. and Mrs. Warren Deakins and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bauer, father and son banquet. Preceding the first meeting, teachers will be in their rooms from 7:30 to 8:15 p.m. and will be available for consultations with parents. Brown band and the singing of Miss Morgan. That Miss Morgan should have been pre sented as a jazz singer was sheet nonsense. Miss Morgan has no feeling for the nuances of a song-she fails to give her songs color and shading and she is wholly lacking in the easeful drive that dis tinguishes a singer of merit from a run-of-the-mill one. -The rest of the show con tained the usual chaffthe mannered percussive clamor of Lionel Hampton, the un- mannered percussive . clamor of Krupa and the inevitable quota of Armstrong chuckles. In short, the show had every thingbut music. Missing Nyssa Teen-Agers Found Nyssa, Ore.-ltTD-Three Nys sa teen-agers who were the object of a widespread air and ground search showed up at a farmhouse four miles south of Owyhee Junction Monday afternoon. The youths, Donald Win slow, 18, and.Royce Roberts and Gene Derock, both 16, told police their car became stuck in sand Sunday while they were on a rabbit hunt ing trip in the Owyhee lake area1. They said they spent the night in the car and walked to the farmhouse Monday. Union Hunter Turns Up in Northeast Area Pendleton (LTD John Som- mers, 26, Union, turned up at a hunting camp in the Kirk land Lake area of Wallowa countj after being reported mission while on a hunting trip. The area in which Sommers was believed lost was 50 miles northeast of Enterprise in the extreme part of north east Oregon. Roseburg Club First To Enter GFWC Contest Roseburg - The Roseburg Woman's club of Roseburg is the first club in the state to enter the newly launched 1958-1960 community achieve ment contest of the General Federation of Women's clubs, according to an announcement by Miss Chloe Gifford, GFWC president, from Washington, D.C., where the club's entry has just been received. Mrs. A. G. McBee, president of the 160-member club, sent in the official entry card in dicating her club's intention to work for community im provement and to submit a scrapbook report, on .its achievements by March 1, 1960. Mrs. Dale Williamson will serve as the club's chair man. There are 105 federated women's clubs in Oregon with a combined membership of 4,634. In the previous commu nity achievement contest, completed in June, 1958, 46 Oregon clubs participated. The top national prize of $10,000 was awarded to the joint en try of the three federated clubs of St. Helens, whose members organized the com munity for an over-all civic improvement campaign, cul minating in formation of a permanent community coun cil. In Oregon, the new contest will be under the direction of Mrs. Walter Brown of Kla math Falls, president of the state Federation of Women's Clubs, and Mrs. Harold A. Shadley of St. Helens, state contest chairman. One club will win $10,000 and others will share in the total of $65,000 in prizes of fered by the Sears-Roebuck Foundation, co-sponsor of the contest with the General Fed States member clubs of the GFWC, as well as its over seas affiliates, are eligible to enter. 100th Birthday To Be Observed Jackson county friends of Mrs.. Sally Lyons, formerly of Gold Hill and now of Oak land, Calif., have received in vitations for a party which will celebrate her 100th birth day anniversary. The party is being planned by her son, Bert Jones, of San Leandro, Calif., and will be held De cember 7. The- Jones family engaged in gold mining and farming when they lived near Gold Hill) Guest Here. Miss Glenna Knorr, Oak land, Calif., was a week end guest of Mrs. Carl Petersen, 1745 Orchard Home court. Miss Knorr, who formerly lived in Medford, is now em ployed as a secretary at Trans Ocean Airlines company, Oak land. ' Nylon molded . ballbearing roller skates are now on the market. The number of parts is reduced from the conven tional 100 or so to about 17. Thes kates come in various colors. Calendar Calendar notices and news for the society section of The Mail Tribune must be submitted in writing and deadline for the Sun day edition is 1 pjn. Friday. Dead line for the weekly calendar is 9 a m of the day of publication and for weeK day news is 5 pjn. the day before publication. Tuesday: 7:30 p.m. Women's As sociation circles, First Pres byterian church, Candlelight, with Mrs. Walter Roemer, route 1, box 358A; and Ves per, with Mrs. R. J. Cunnings ham, 24 North Groveland ave. 8 p.m. Nevita chapter, Order of Eastern Star, Mason ic temple, Central Point. 8 p.m. Oregon Nurses As sociation, District 4, Sacred Heart hospital. 8 p.m. Pythian club, home of Mrs. J. B. Cochran, 63 Bush st., Ashland. Wednesday: 10-12 noon Kiwanian Dames coffee, home of Mrs. Lawrence W. Buonocore, 433 West 8th st. 10:30 a.m. Medford Home Extension unit, courthouse au ditorium. - - 11 a.m. Medford Town- send club, Carpenters hall, 123 West Main st. 12:30 p.m. Chapter AA of PEO Sisterhood, home of Mrs. Robert J. Cunningham, 24 North Groveland ave. 12:30 p.m. Jackson coun ty Cow Belle association, Rogue Valley Country club. 12:30 p.m.. Women of Rotary, home of Mrs., Dgney Jorgensen, 1913 Hillcrest rd. 12:30 pjn. Women's As sociation circle First Presby terian church, Temple, with Mrs. Eugene Orr, Old Military rd. 1 p.m. American Associ ation of University Women's Book Review group, home of Mrs. Walter Roemer, route 4, box 358A, Medford. 1:30 p.m. Rogue Valley Hospital auxiliary, board and staff room. . BOY'S BEST FRIEND To the delight ef joungr fans of the famous TV star. Kara tan has woven the likeness of Rin-Tin-Tin in this washable cotton rug;. And it will delight Dad, too. w ho remembers Rinty as the matinee movie idol of his youth. This rug is one of many this fail featuring animal motifs for children's rooms. ' Visitors Winners , At Duplicate Club A Grants Pass couple, Mrs. Jack Barr and Mrs. N. B. Wright, won first place in the north and south playing posi tion when Riverside Bridge club played for master points last week. Other north-south winners were Mrs. Paul Hatton and Mrs. Al Gilhousen, second; Mrs. George B. Dean and Mr. Hatton, third; Mrs. Jack Mitchell and Mrs. Howard Boyd, fourth. Winning east - west were Mrs. Frank R. Baker and Roy Pruitt, first; Mrs. W. W. Ste venson and Mrs. Sam Rich ardson .second; Mrs. E. K. Ricker and Mrs. Jack Love, third; Mrs. Glen Harrison and Mrs. W. J. Williams, fourth. 4 American Banners Subject of Book 1 Wednesday Study club members learned many facts about the history of this na tion, particularly, the city of Washington, D.C., when Mrs. E. W. Jermark reviewed, "Pa rade With Banners," at the; last meeting. The author, Don ald Culross Peattie, writes of' his country both as a naturalist and as a historian. He deems the Declaration of Independence as the first ban ner; the Bill of Rights, as the second banner, the Stars and Stripes, the oldest national emblem .in use, as the third banner, and so on, with a va riety of humorous incidents to bring renewed vigor and love to America's heritage. Mrs. Jack Swem read an article in the current Coronet Magazine about honey and its nutritive qualities and told of the various kinds of honey which the bees produce from different kinds of plants. Mrs. Swem also gave some interest ing facts about the potato, its origin and its importance to our diet. . Care of Stamps, Speaker's Topic Jim Scheffel spoke on the care, selection and mounting of mint stamps at the last meeting of Southern Oregon Stamp club. He emphasized that centering, perforations, and care can detract from the value of mint stamps. Mr. Scheffel, who collects United States mint stamps, used Scott's Specialized Stamp catalog to illustrate his points. The club planned its annual Christmas party with the ex change of philatelic items. The social committee will be Clyde Smith, Frank Apple gate and Mrs. Eric de Place. The December meeting w.ill also be election of officers and the nominating commit tee is Mr. and Mrs. Russell Herbert and Roland Beach.. The club also heapd the by laws committee read the revi sions planned; the committee is Clyde Smith, Roland Beach and Mrs. Lillian Capsey. Refreshments were served by , Mr. and Mrs. Roland Beach. . CALL AS REPLACEMENT Viennese soprano Lionie Rysanek, appearing in Los Angeles with the San Fran cisco Opera Company, is all smiles after being engaged by the New York Metro politan Opera Company to replace Maria Callas. It was announced Miss Callas , was fired for refusal to live up to the terms of her contract To Elect Past Noble Grands' club of Olive Rebekah lodge will hold election of officers at a meet ing to.be held Thursday, No vember 13, at 8 p.m. at Girls Community club. Refresh ments will be served. Organ Society To Hold Meeting Hammond Organ society members will hear a talk by Sam Taylor at a meeting set for Thursday, November 13, at; 8 p.m., at Purucker's Mu sic house. He will talk on the use of tape recorders. A musi cal program is also planned. Anyone interested is invited to attend. H Calif ornians Guests In Chandler Home Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Jung and Mrs. Doris Davies, For-tuna,x- Calif., were guests in Medford last week of .Mrs. Nina Chandler, 742 West Fourteenth street. Mrs. A. L. Gertlar, Eu gene, and Mr. and Mrs. L. E. Bonham, Los Angeles, have returned to their homes after a stay here with Mrs. Chand ler. ' GOLD HILL Have Unexpected Visitor By MRS. CLYDE KELL Geld Hill - Mr. and Mrs. Norman Gail and son, Donald, were surprised recently when Lt. Robert E. Downen stopped at their home on Highway 99 North for a visit. Lt. Downen, a West Point graduate, had recently landed in New York from the Pana ma Canal Zone, where he had been an instructor in jungle warfare for the past two years. He was en route to Fort Lewis. Mrs. Gail and Downen are cousins and had not seen each other since Downen was a child. While in southern Ore gon," he was a1 guest at the home of the H. G. Wilsons, Medford. Several Gold Hill women were luncheon guests in the nome of Mrs. Sadie Cyphers in Sams Valley recently. They were Mrs. Millie Walker, Mrs. Nina Dusenberry, and Mrs. Carrie Puhl. Mrs. Everett Drake return ed to her home at the Lazy Acres motel last week from a Medford hospital, where she had been a surgery patient. Friends report that Mrs. Wilbur Martin, Upper River road, and Mrs. Hannah Routh, Eugene City Council Picks New Mayor Eugene fUPD Republican State Rep. Edwin E. Cone, 41, was elected mayor of Eugene Monday night by the city council to fill the unexpired term of John J. McGinty. McGinty was voted out of office by the council after the city fathers determined he spent too much time away from the city at his business in Colorado. A stipulation in the city charter states no mayor can be away from the city for more than 60 days. Cone, a partner in a Goshen lumber firm and a former Eugene city councilman, re ceived five votes to be elect ed. Councilwoman Katherine Lauris got two votes and Councilman-elect Hobart Wil son received one vote. Eight persons sit on the Eugene city council. Cone was an unsuccessful candidate for a State Senate seat in this year's election. The current mayor's term goes. two more years. Texas was a republic from 1836 until 1945 when it joined the United States. FLOORCOVERING SERVICE 127 NORTH RIVERSIDE We Install Your . LINOLEUM, CARPET, FORMICA it TILE Carpet anal Furniture Cleaning Repairing SP 3-6387 Eves. SP 3-3943 Vocal Longevity Record Set By Members of Choir By GAY PAULEY . UPI Women's Editor ' New York -JUPD- Careers of female vocalists at the Met ofr ten are shorthand end on a sour note. It's a different tune for those in the Salt Lake Mormon Tabernacle choir. Some of the ladies are 'set ting records for vocal longev ity and hardly anybody gets fired. During the choir's visit to New York as part of its na tional tour, I talked with three long-time singers with the famous musical group. Their years With the choir added up to more than a cen tury and alL are still going strong. Mother of Year . To Be Honored At Annual Event Eagle Point - Deadline, for nominations for a "mother of the year" in the Eagle Point Shady Cove district, has been set at November 15. The award winner will be an nounced by the sponsoring group, Eagle Point Jayceettes, at the second annual tasting tea and style show which has been - set for December 5 at 3 p.m. at the Eagle Point Grange hall. Women's organization in the area are asked to submit their candidates to Mrs. Don ald Kimmel or Mrs. Harry Hanscom, co-chairmen of the event. According to Mrs. Glenn Nelson, general chairman of the December party, the theme will be "Celestial Tea." Eagle Point Town and Coun try shop, which supplied clothing last year, will do so for this year's party. Musical entertainment and prizes are planned. Baby sitting will be provided with out extra charge. Gold Hill, have been ill the past week Mrs. Carl Routh, local li brarian, attended the last all day in-training meeting which was held at the Medford li brary. Mrs. Routh said all phases of the work was studied in the morning ses sion. Those attending were taken on a tour of the branch ibraries in Jacksonville, Phoenix and Talent after luncheon at a Medford Hotel. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rose crans and daughter, Susan, and Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Bailey spent the last week end of the deer season hunting in the Biy area. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Davis and sons, Jerry and Glenn, and Mrs. Davis' mother and broth er, Mrs. Jewel Byrnes and James Byrnes, who have all been residing in the Blinka home on Highway 99 north, have moved back to the Byrnes family home on Lamp man road. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bolt, and their neighbors had some unwelcome excitment on Hal loween night, when the Bolts had a flue fire at their home at Homestead on the Rogue. The Rogue River rural fire department answered the call. Those at the scene report that the department about four minutes after being called. Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Miller and Mrs. Blanche Merriman, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Rit ter, all of Gold Hill were among those from southern Oregon who attended the fun eral of Joe Morris held in Eu gene Oct. 30. The deceased died at .Mon roe on Oct. 28. He was a long time resident of Gold Hill and well known by many of the older residents of this area. ! Mrs. Miller and Mrs. Merri man were nieces, and Ray mond Ritter a great nephew of the man. He was the father of Carlos Morris, Medford. Call Us For New LOW PRICES WASHING and DYEING Your Washable Rugs! Many Lovely Decorator Colors to Choose From FREE PICKUP ana DELIVERY SESVICE! DIAL SP 2-6165 V UEvTORD A Ujonwtuc, If I UMNMT I MY ClUMftS I 30-32 N. RIVERSIDE One is Mrs. Warren Thom as, a lively woman in her 70s, wife of the four "director and mezzo-soprano with the choir for 45 years. Mrs. Thomas has five children and 12 grandchildren. There is Mrs. Lester F. Hewlett, 58, whose husband is choir president. She was the youngest member of the choir when she joined as a soprano, 35 years ago. She has five chil dren and 16 grandchildren. And the third is Mrs. Wil fred A. Beesley, a contralto, widowed, and a member of the organization, on and off, for 47 years. Mrs. Beesley, who has four children and eight grandchil dren, was with the choir on its previous visit to New York in 1911. She didn't want to discuss age "just say I was a child soprano," she laugh ed. "No matter how long we've been with the choir, we all take regular auditions," . she said. "Oh, the membership changes. It isn't so much a case of being asked to leave. If you've got good sense, you know when"you're through."! Mrs. Thomas said "it nearly killed me to do it, but last year I asked the choir to re lease me. I was just afraid my voice no longer was what it should be. Instead they made me a member of the staff." All 37S members of the choir, male and female, vol unteer their services. Their only pay is the reward of making fine music. Some trav el as many as 85 miles into Salt Lake City fori rehearsals for the regular Sunday net work broadcasts, which start ed in 1929. : Many Are Mothers , During their Carnegie hall appearance, Richard . L. Ev ans, who does "the spoken word" on the broadcasts, was pointing out that members fol low a wide variety of car eers. There are a glass blow er, a wool puller, an internal revenue agent, college . stu dents, and husband and wife teams. "And," he said, "will all of you who are mothers and homemakers stand up?" Most of the feminine chor us arose. 'You can see," quipped Evans, "there are hundreds of homeless and wandering chil dren back in Utah." But neither home, nor hus bands nor children is neglect ed because of choir duties, said Mrs. Hewlett. Even when there are extra rehearsals in preparation for a tour. "The housework all gets done," she said. "But the baby sitting fees were really some' thing ail this last -summer, We had rehearsals three night a week." f ..: Fisher-Taylor Marriage Denied Hollywood -(UPD-R e ports that Eddie Fisher and Eliza beth Taylor, 26, planned to marry within a month were denied again Monday by a spokesman for the couple. Fisher, 30, is still married to actress Debbie Reynolds, 26, mother of his two children, the . spokesman said. They have not taken any divorce ac tion and therefore the singer is legally constrained- from marrying anyone at present, he said. Miss Reynolds blamed her husband's frequent dates with Miss Taylor in New York sev eral months ago as the cause for the breakup of their ."ideal marriage." kit nil It's hard to bo sura you're gettinf a bargain when you can't look inside to "see what makae So why gamble? Best way to avoid buying mistakes is to use the basic rule of sound buy ing: A good brand is your best guarantee. Whatever you buy, yo know the maker stands behind a good brand. You can't go wrong. The more good brands you know the surer you are. Get to know them in ibis newspaper. They'll help you cut buying1 mistakes, get more for your money. BRAND NAMES FOUNDATION bMfenhJ A Non-Profit Educational Foundation 11 West 57th Street, New York 19, New York If you translate chaise lounge from the French, you get "long chair," and that's aa exact description of the way this piece of furniture started. Beds were so ornate and larqe during the early reiqn of Louis XIV that the chaise was designed for daytime rest. In time the chaise lounge, too, became elabo rate, often involving three luxuriously upholstered pieces (two arm chairs joined by a stool). was simple (upper), cane with loose cushions thrown on top. Below is a model introduced this fall by the Cox Manufac turing company. Inc. " "-:' w Antelope 4-H New Officers Ronnie Anderson was elect ed president of the Antelope 4-H clubs at their achieve ment night in the Eagle Point Grane- hall Saturday, accord ing to Glenn Klein, Jackson county 4-H agent. " Elected to serve with him were Steve Geren, vice presi dent, Georgia Hubbard, secre tary and Karen Jossy, report er. This election was part of the annual potluck and 4-H achievement night. R. E. Hein, First National Bank of Ore gon, Medford, branch, present ed pins and cards to club members for 4-H work. Special awards to Antelope 4-H'ers included the Farhills Holstein farm trophy present ed to Steve Geren as an out standing exhibitor of Holstein cattle at the Jackson County 4-H and FFA fair. Three Ante 'ope' 4-H'ers received county fair board medals for record book work. Bill Hubbard re ceived the swine medal,' Karen Jossy, junior bread award, and Nyla - Murray, Clothing IV B award. Win Medals Antelope club members win ning county medals as previ ously announced were Judy Bradshaw and Dave Woolf oik, BAZAAR -FIRST METHODIST CHRUCH 607 West Main : : Thursday, Nov. 13-10 a.m. -9 p.m. SMORGASBORD DINNER 5:30 p.m.-8 p.m. Turkey Ham and Beans '.Italian Spaghetti - . Prices: $1.50 adults .75 6-12 yr. olds I .25 preschoolers - Cafeteria Style Luncheon 11:30 a.m.-l p.m. . MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE This style in colonial America Clubs Name for 1959 achievement; Fred Jossy and Bill Hubbard, boys', agricul ture; Jo Anna Malloroy,- dairy foods - demonstration; Alice Woolfolk, - food - preparation; and Ann Higday, swine. - - Those presented cards and pins for years of 4-H achieve ment were Nyla Murray, ninth year. Eighth year Sharon Coff manr Arthur Gardener,- Diana Gardener, Ann Higday, -Fred Jossy and David Woolfolkr- - U . Seventh year Bill Hub bard. Jo Anna Malloroy and Larry Meyer. jz Sixth year Donald Higday and Alice Woolfolk. Fifth year Ronald Ander son, Judy Bradshaw, Charlotte Bush, Georgia Hubbard and Karen Jossy.- Four year Steven Geren and Michael Higday. Third year Richard Ander son, Christine' Bartells, Errol Coffman, Donna Geren, Judy Hill and Richard Meyer. Second yeac Paulette An derson, Sandy Bayliss,. Mary Ann Gardener, Boby Hub bard, Mike Reid and Florence Woolfolk. . . . . . ; I j -. First . year---Marc . Bayliss, Kay Bever, Glen Frey, Jerry HalfhUL, Lester Hill, Terry Jean. Lee, Elaine Meyer and Jennifer Nevin. . .".