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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (May 14, 1959)
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TOMATOES emeu ME IS ESS t Clef Dwellers Announce Second' Third Concerts The second and third in a series of concerts being pre sented this season by the Clef Dwellers are scheduled for May 17 and 19. The Sunday concert will be held -in Ash land's Lithia Park at a spot near the entrance and belqw the Shakespearean theater at 3:30 in the afternoon. The Tuesday concert, to be given at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Hall, 7 Eastwood drive in Medf ord, is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Both concerts will include groups of madri gals, recorder trios, and a vo cal solo in Elizabethan man ner." The public is invited to at tend both concerts, which are being offered, like others of the series, as benefits for the Shakespearean Festival Thea ter. Refreshments will be served by members of the Tu dor Guild and Western Cof fee Service. Clef Dwellers is a recently organized informal group of musicians from Medford and To Meet Medford Fifty Plus club will meet Friday, May 15, at 12:30 p.m. at St. Mark's Epis copal Guild hall. Refresh ments will be followed by games and dancing. ' Ashland. Its membership in cludes Mrs. ' Norman Caroth ers, Mrs. Gene Chamberlain, Robert Churchill-, Mrs. Har old Cook, Dave Curtis, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Corliss, Mrs. Charles Freeman, Mrs. Ervin Hogan, Mrs. Robert Kagy, Mrs. William Le Combe, Car roll Graber, Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Matthews, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Schuhard, Todd Tibbutt, and Miss Helen Web ster. Mrs. Freeman is serving the group as general chair man, and direction is given by Mr. Matthews, assistant pro fessor of music at Southern Oregon college. The initial concert of the group, given in a riverside setting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Allen Jr., was attended by about forty persons. Lodge Announces Memorial Service Master Ross Gilkison , of Medford Masonic lodge an nounces that a memorial ser vice will be conducted by the lodge. Friday, May 15, at 8 p.m. at the temple. All Masons are invited. - Erie L. Klein of Ashland lodge will speak' following the ceremony, his subject to be the practices of Freemasonry in Mexico., r ' r .J Mrs. Leona M. Ward 4-H Cfub Ke.vs Siiich and Stir Club The meeting of the Stitch and Stir 4-H club was held at Mrs. James Pullman's home on May 6. Eileen . Pullman and Jean nette Hoglen told us about judging exhibits at fair time. Then each girl judged towels and aprons. Refreshments were served by Valorie Knight. , . Virginia Mace, Reporter . v. 1 About one-half of the na tion's largest cities enforce anti-noise ordinances. Califomian To Attend Convention Mrs. Leona M. Ward, Pleas anton, Calif., chairman of the public relations committee of the National Federation of Business and Professional Women's clubs, will attend the 159 convention of the Ore gon Federation to be held here this week end. Mrs. Pleasantbn is associate editor of The Daily Review, pub lished in Hayward, Calif., and is the former editor . of The California Woman, monthly magazine of the California Federation of Business and Professional Women's clubs. : Mrs. Ward is active in com munity affairs, is on the board of the Hayward Red Cross chapter, the Cerebral Palsy association, the National Safe ty council and. the Salvation Army. She is also a member of American Association of University Women, Zonta in ternational and Theta Sigma Phi. The convention opens Fri day, at 10 ajn. with registra tion at , the Medford hotel. Banquets are scheduled for Friday and Saturday nights at Hedrick Junior High school, and business sessions at Med ford High school. About 450 women are expected to attend MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Or. Thursday, May 14, 1959 Chapter to Hold Ceremony Tonight Alpha Rho chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will install officers for the coming year at a cere mony to be held tonight at the home of the chapter spon- -sor, Mrs. James Callan, 6 Keeneway drive. Cohostesses for the evening are Miss Di ana Bowlin and Mrs. Lou Cranston. Mrs. Allan Sterton will give the cultural pro gram. Mrs. Cranston was hostess for the last meeting of the chapter April 23. Members ex changed recipes for 10 cents apiece with proceeds going into the treasury. The chapter honored Mrs. Richard Hensel man by voting her Girl of the Year. Mrs. Henselman has been President of Alpha Rho this year.' Miss Bowlin and Miss Jean Johnson gave the program. Dances Planned At Moose Hall A series of square dances will be held at Moose hall, 11 Newtown street, with the first set for Friday, May 15, from 8:30 until 11 pjn. The dances will be held each first and third Friday .of coming months, it is announced. Me men without really meaning to) v - L ou're not the sort of man who deliberately doses his eyes to the future. Not at alL In fact, you started buying U. S. Savings Bonds because you knew they could mean a better life for you and your family in the years ahead. But then something happened. For one reason or another, you lost the Savings Bond habit. And yet today there is more reason than ever to invest in Bonds. And millions of Americans know it In 1958, the amount of money they owned in Bends reached an all-time high over 42z billion dollars. Despite the "recession", they bought more Bonds and cashed fewer than the year before. i 5 Americans know regular savings is the surest road to a secure future. And there's no better, safer, easier way to save than with U. S. Savings Bonds. . - - . ' - ! " ' ' Think it over. Isn't it time you got back into the ' Savings Bond habit and started looking ahead again? Facts job should know about U.S. Savings Bonds Bonds are as safe an investment as you can make. The government guarantees them. , They pay more interest than ever, , and E Bonds mature in less fane than ever. You can buy Bonds through, the PayroB Savings Plan; or where you bank: or where you go to school, through the School Savings Plan for 0. S. Savings Stamps. Bonds are mdestrudiWe. If yoar , Bond is lost, stolen, or mntiteted, ' the government replaces it tree. 6 Any bank will cash them but the average saver tends to hang on to his Bonds. So chances are you won't find yourself frittering away Bonds but will hold them until you really need the cash. Bonds help strengthen America's , Peace Power. Peace costs money. Money for military and industrial strength. Money for science and ed ucation. Money saved by individuals to keep our economy strong. That's why every Bond yoa buy helps strengthen'America's Peace Power at the same time it's helping build your personal financial security. Help strengthen America's Peace Power 1 1 ll HMD TUXS.S. Gocenmett dam mat Pr far tU. adotrtimmg. Tkt Treauny Deptrtmemt thamks, far their patriotic douatio. The Adoertuing CoumcU ami Red Ripe LARGE SLICING .18! Cool, Crisp Medford Mail Tribune It sir 3