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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1959)
Tomorrow!1 News About Books From the Library Snappy-Wrap MAIL TRIBUNE, Medferd1, Or. C Sunday, July 5, 1959 i: is 1 wV -v LAST 'PAWSHAKE'-Mrs. Clara .Glascock, (leftf 233 Beatty St., Medford, bids goodbye to Helga, the German Shepherd pup she raised, following graduation ceremonies recently from the Guide Dogs for the Blind Inc. school in San Rafael. Mrs. Nina Belle Johnson (center) who is Helga's partner was among the seven sightless men and women who graduated June 27. Mrs. Johnson and Helga flew to East Wenatchee, Wash., following the ceremony. At an early age the dogs bred at Guide Dogs for the Blind are placed in foster homes where they can enjoy family life. On her first birthday Helga was returned to the school where she received three months training with a string of eight dogs under the tutelage of a licensed trainer. The next four weeks of intensive school ing were with Mrs. Johnson. Halga was the first dog raised by Mrs. Glascock. When she attended the recent ceremony she took a second dog back to San Rafael to start its training. Mrs. Glascock-expects to receive a third dog soon for pre liminary training. PROSPECT Fritz Dean Visits Area Br FRANCES RING Prospect - An "Oldtimer" visiting in this area last week was Fritz Dean, one of four sons of the Dean family who were among the first people to homestead in Prospect. The family made their home at what is now known as Cop eo's forebay and though they left here approximately 65 years ago, there are still signs of flowers and garden there. Mother of the Dean family was the former Lydia Tuff who was very prominent in the Rogue valley. She was educated at the Sisters school in Jacksonville when Father Blanchett was pastor there. At that time, the school was used as a finishing school for some of the more promi nent young ladies of the val ley and it taught,' along with all the regular studies, a num ber of the graces and arts considered so necessary at that time. . Of the brothers Dean, James and Joe are living and Albert is dead. Fritz was pur suing his favorite hobby here, which is seeing and col lecting wild flowers. He visit ed with Mrs. Frances Pear son and Mrs. Elsie Phipps. Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Monte Ring on Sun day was her uncle, Mr. Rus sell Womelsdorf, and sons from Broadbent, Ore. . Fashion Page Flash ill 9009 SIZES 1018 Twice marvelous - sew this divinely shaped -sheath, with fashion's new butterfly sleeve or as a bare-armed beauty. Whip it up in a day to take 'you from sunup to sundown, all summer. Tomorrow's pat tern: Misses dress. Printed Pattern 9009: Misses' Sizes 10, 12, 14, 16, 18. Size 16 takes 23i yards 35-inch fabric. Printed directions on each pattern part. Easier, accurate. Send FIFTY CENTS (coins) for this pattern - add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Marian Mar tin, Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. George Brown and Monte Ring took a two-man rubber boat down the Rogue from above Union Creek to just above the. Natural bridge. They report the ride was treacherous. The Ben Scriven family spent last week end visiting with friends in Grants Pass. The Natural bridge across Rogue river is above water for the first time ; in years. It can be crossed on foot and the log pile that has "backed the water over the bridge for so long is gone The water has worn a new channel un der the rocks and is very pic turesque pouring out below. Mr. and Mrs. George Ring Jr. and daughters Patty, Georgene and Mary, spent last Saturday visiting with Mrs. Rings parents, Mr. and Mrs. Louis M. Russell, who drove from Mehama, Ore., and met the Rings at Diamond lake. They had a picnic and visited with the Russell's daughter-in-law, Mrs. Evelyn Womels dorf, who is working at the lake. Patty went home with her grandparents and plans to stay over the Fourth. Georgene Ring is staying with relatives in Medford for a few days.' Jurl Hicks is in the Rogue Valley hospital and expects to be there for at least an other week. Plans for the Jamboree are progressing well, but more entries .are needed for the parade, it was reported. There are registration slips in the local stores, which should be in the week before July 25. For Information, one may call UNion 9-2211. The Rev. Boyd Powers and family went to camp meeting at Brooks, Oregon last week end. Powers returned home on Monday but Mrs. Powers and Boyd Jr., stayed to spend the week there. With Mrs. Powers is his sister, who has been visiting with relatives Visiting at the home of his in this area for some time. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Dee Hedgpeth, is Marine private Robin Hedgpeth. He is home on 20-day leave and will re port back to Camp Pendleton at the ond of that time. The following list of books have been added to the Jack son county library during July. In the adult department are: Fiction: A Change of Heart, Butor; That Distant After noon, Fuller; The Seed, Gas car; The Big X, Searls. Cookery: Indian Cooking, Chowdhary; Italian Cooking, Daly; Austrian Cooking, Rules Given for Bicycle Riders Care, courtesy and common sense will make the remaind er of the 'summer safe and happy for bike riders in this community, Police Chief Charles P. Champlin stated this week. "Bike riders can insure the safe and happy operation of their bikes if they will fol low the 12 rules of safe riding issued by the Bicycle Institute of America," Chief .Champlin said. The rules apply to all traf fic situations, he stated. He urged all riders to follow them carefully to insure a summer of pleasant, carefree riding. The rules are: V 1. Observe all traffic regu lations, signs and lights. 2. Keep to the right. Ride in single file. 3. For night riding, have headlight and rear danger signal. Wear white or light colored clothing. ' 4. Have workable horn or bell. Maintain safe speed. ' 5. Watch for cars pulling into traffic. Be careful of doors opening on parked cars, 6. Never hitch on other ve hicles. Do not stunt or race in traffic. . 7. Carry no passengers or objects which interfere with vision or proper control of ;the bike. 8. Keep your bicycle in perT feet operating condition. Make sure the brakes are function ing properly. ; 9. "Stop, Look and Listen" at all traffic intersections. 10. Always use proper hand signals for turning and stop ping. 11. Ride in a straight line -do not swerve or weave. .-. 12. Avoid sidewalk riding. Always give pedestrians 'the right of way. Knox; Chinese Cooking, Oli ver; Andre Simon's French Cookbook, Simon; German Cooking, Whitfield. History: Crucibles, Jaffe; Buffalo Bill and the Wild West, Sell; Campfires and Battlefields, Johnson; History of the World's Art, Leicht. Reference: B a u g h m a n's Aviation Dictionary and Ref erence Guide, Baughman; Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians, Grove; The Best Loved Poems of the American People,, Felleman; Current Biography, 1950 and 1958. Other non-fiction: When Your Child Is 111, Karelitz; Her Majesty the Cat, Mery; McCall's Treasurey of Needle craft, McCall's Needlework magazine. In the junior department new volumes include: Fiction: Stonewall's Couri er, Hinkins; The Adventures of Rinaldo, Holt; The Fisher man's Son, Lattimore; Treas ure of the High Country, Lauritzen; The Borrowers Afloat, Norton; The Duke of Sycamore, Parker; An Edge of the Forest, Smith; Musa the Shoemaker, Stinetorf; Willie Joe and His Small Change, Vance. Easy books: On Our Way, Betts; See Us Come, Bond; See Us Have Fun, Bond; See Us Play, Bond; See Us Ride, Bond; This Little Pig . Went to Market, Brooke; Tom Thumb, Brooke; Chanticleer and the Fox, Chaucer; Clean Clarence, Friedrich; Fly, Redwing, Fly, Goff; Let It Rain! Koch; Saint Francis and the Animals, Politi; Seeds and More Seeds, Selsam; Let's Go to a City Hall, Wolfe; The Plant Sitter, Zion. Non - fiction: Psychology, Phillips; Spiders, Hogner; Be ginnings, Fahs; Goats, Bron- son; Make It and Use It, Carl son; The First Book of Bas ketball, Schiffer; The Story of Madame Curie, Thome; Vasco ,da Gama, Syme; The Dqptor Who Dared, Noble; The Crusaders, Buehr. PROGRESS SOUGHT Cambridge, Mass. -UPD-The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is seeking new techniques to replace 5,000-year-old methods of casting art objects in metal. Boston sculp tor Alfred Duca is in charge oi tne researcn project, sup ported by a $10,000 Rockefel ler Foundation grant. Wear this in, out and 'round the house as apron, jumper, or sundress. Belt cinches waist; opens flat for easy ironing. Tulip pocket, done in a jiffy. Pattern 7390: tissue pat tern: transfer; small 10, 12; medium 14, 16; large 18, 20 State size. ' Send Thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for lst-class mailing. Send to Medford Mail Tribune, House hold Arts Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly Name, Address, Pattern Num ber, Sise. ' . Our 1959 ALICE BROOKS Needlecraf t Catalogue has many lovely designs to order: crocheting, knitting, embroid ery, quilts, dolls, weaving. A special gift, in the catalog to keep a child happily occupied a cutout doll and clothes to color. Send 25 cents for your copy of the book. CURE BECOMES CURSE Sidi Slimane Air Force Morocco-(UPD-The officers club at this Strategic air Command base was troubled by an influx of rats. Club officials import ed a dozen stray cats to curb the rats. Now the cat popula tion has increased so rapidly that officers are looking for dogs to control the cats. The Rev. Jerry Reeves de livered the morning service at the Prospect Assembly of God church last Sunday. He expects to take the church permanently and will move up with. his family very soon. SUNDAY SCHOLARS Oklahoma City-(UPI-Among Southern Baptists, at least, the number of adults enrolling in Sunday schools is increas ing, according to Dr. W. L. Howse of Nashville, Term., di rector of the education divi sion of the Southern Baptist Sunday School board. '"They want to recapture i something that was lost" ! when they left Sunday school in their youth, Howse explained. DAILY'S Body & Painl ' Southern Oregon's . Oldest and Finest - 29 S. BARTLETT Phone t SP 2-2395 . SHOP TOMORROW 19:30 a.m. lo 9 p.m. DOWNTOWN MEDFORD July Super Purchase! FULL FASHION IWILdDPJS . '' 'r PAIRS FOR Flawless first quality Dark seams for dramatic leg glamour . . . full-fashioned for perfect fit . . . Penney7 nylon sheers have everything you want at an incredibly low price to afford you delightful dozens! Enjoy these first-quality nylons in 15--denier, 60-gauge construction to give you sheerness plus a good measure of wear. Enjoy, too, Penney's colors offresh new shades of gala and confetti spiced with, slim, slim dark seams. HOSIERY - PENNEY'S STREET FLOOR . Only she knows how little she spends (she sews with Penney Fabrics) OSTim 'jl i ft) HUGE vJjWi Sli-ANNUAL f J jfly$k$ YARDAGE WfM VWn urs rat Mm I1" "fe y a f.... .,.-iMgi. i. ir AT -.,,-,7L. - Is" , D U U Yards! PRICES SLASHED! I ' iCHOOSE FROM : '1 o Plain, PRINTED COTTONS o Some NYLONS o ARNELS o Dacron SHEERS o Plain, PRINTED RAYONS BATISTES o Plain, NOVELTY SYNTHETICS o Tuffed NYLON SHEERS 3500 YARDS PLAIN, PRINTED SETTER QUALITY: CO WORK Sew dress, blouses, aprons, childrenfs things and SAVEI Widths of 36" to 38", all are tubfast. Doorbuster priced now . . . hurry in early Monday while selections are big. Choose from' Dan River tissue ginghams, Lacon N' Leno prints, woven stripes or solid chambrays, Ramona kitchen prints, cotton skirt border prints, regulated type cottons, Hawaiian prints, embossed cottons! I I 1000 YARDS ALL PERFECTS! 80 Square Percales Printed 36" Cottons Florals, small provincials .4 r $n j 2000 YARDS FAMOUS MILLS COTTONS! Printed Batistes Woven Broadcloths Famous Rondo Percales Yards $ For 1 1100 YARDS FAMOUS NAME FABRICS A fabric buy you cant afford to pass up . . . Penney's sensational special of wonderful summertime fabrics at near-to-nothing prices) Pima georgettes, print ed fullcana, eyelash tuffed cottons, woven seersuckers, powder p"uff mus'lins, Arnel and cotton coordinates, sportswear Pensisheen 'n solids or stripes! 500 YARDS 500 YARDS Cotton Satin Prints! Courtier Acetate Prints! Nylon Chiffons! Solid Dacron and Cottons! 7F. Tuffed Nylon Sheers! Combed Sheen Gabardines! Oil Painting: Prints! 66