MAIL TRIBUNE. Medford, Or.
Medford Student Takes Part
In Ceremonies at Portland
Colburn Barrel! a son of
Mr. and Mrs. Colburn H. Bar
rel!, 101 Greenway drive, was
In Portland last week to repre
sent his parents at a dedica
tion ceremony sponsored by
the Daughters of Colonial
"Wan of Oregon.
The ceremony took place
Wednesday, July 22 and hon
ored an ancestor of the Med
ford youth' who was respon
sible for founding the Lone
Fir cemetery 105 years ago
A bronze marker was erected
at the cemetery in his mem
ory.
The founder of the ceme
tery was also named Colburn
Barrell, and he was the grand-
Miss Ady
Speaker
For Group
At the July meeting of the
Southern Oregon society of
Artists, Miss Marion Ady, art
instructor of Southern Oregon
college, Ashland, was guest
speaker. Miss Ady selected
nine pictures to be exhibited
at Purucker's Piano house
The works are by Ethyl Hix-
son, Dorothy Eskew, Marie
Starks, Chris Binker, Harry
Marx, Arlita Pletsch, Mrs. G.
C. Corum, and George John
son.
Miss Ady spoke about non-
objective painting and the two
ways of approach. First is the
accidental approach, she said,
which is free style of marks
and shapes, and the contrived
approach, by actually taking
a selection of combinations.
She showed how the Heck-
man approach uses different
intervals, lengths, and direc
tions, how Eugene Steinhof
starts with a doodle, using va
riety in size, shape, area and
form and the style of Jean
Vards by his use of two main
colon.
Miss Ady said the things to
work for in painting are color,
form, line and texture.
The guests were Miss Ady,
Miss Alice Rogers, a cousin
of Miss Ady from Cedar
Rapids, Iowa, Mrs. Allen
Smith, Mrs. Ruby Ralston,
and Mrs. Joyce Gariason all
of Medford.
Hostesses were Mrs. Jack
Mitchell and Mrs. Tom Staley.
The Society has a rotating
exhibit. this summer at Frake
and Smith store. Each week
one picture by a member of
the group la exhibited, and
the public is invited to visit
the store to see the paintings.
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ft x vKk ' ?
-V r t
f XS0" 601 East Main
Monday, July 27. 1959
son of Joseph Barrell of Bos
ton who was associated with
Capt. Robert Gray in the his
toric voyage to Northwest
waters and accompanied the
seafaring hero on the epic
journey in 1792. History says
that the first Barrell to ar
rive in this country came on
the Mayflower, and that he
founded a shipbuilding firm
in Boston. This firm built the
ship which Captain Gray
sailed to the Northwest, and
Joseph Barrell accompanied
him as a ship's carpenter.
Was Boat Builder
mony was a successful boat
builder in Milwaukie, Ore.
The founder of the cere
When two of his friends, D.
P. Fuller and a young sea
man whose last name was
Dobbins, were killed when
the ship Gazelle exploded,
they founded the cemetery as
a resting place for their
bodies.
During last week s cere
monies the Medford student.
officially known as Colburn
Barrell V, although in reality
he is the 26th male to hold
this name in his family, was
photographed with another
fifth-generation descendent of
the honored man. This was
Mrs. George Schenk, Portland
Some time ago another his
torical society, the Daughters
of the American Revolution
placed a marker on an elm
tree in Portland. The tree
grew from a slip taken from
the famous Washington elm
and was brought around the
horn and planted by the
father of the man honored
last week.
Mrs. F. E. Upton, state presi
dent of the Daughters of
Colonial Wars, presided at
last week's ceremonies.
Young Barrell, 15 and
known to his classmates as
Corky," will be a sophomore
at Medford High school this
fall.
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H. D. Chrittansen
Student Writes of Walking
Craig Philips, Medford high
school graduate who studied
at Edinburgh university
Scotland the past year, has
traveled through much
Europe since going aboard
with the aid of a Fulbright
scholarship
The student, son of Dr. and
Mrs. S. E. Philips, majored in
history at the University of
Oregon and studied philoso
phy and psychology at Edin
burgh
He is to return to Medford
in September and will enter
the University of Chicago on
a teaching scholarship in Oc
tober,
The young man is hikin
through parts of Europe this
summer.
Following his earlier travels
through Belgium and France,
the student wrote of his de
light with the Belgium town
of Brugge. He said:
"In the dusk I could make
out three lofty towers, and
since trees shut other build
ings of the town from view.
this trio seemed to stand
alone, rising for no apparent
reason out of the hazy low
land plain.
Town Casts Spell
"It was fairly dark when I
reached the streets of the
town itself, and as I stepped
onto the narrow sidewalk
with a face already formed
for a happy smile and an ex
cited breath, which was only
partly due to the brisk pace.
I became a surprised but will
ing victim of the town's spell
of unreality - Brugge , was
fairytale.
"A moment's attention to
where those big feet were go
ing revealed that the sidewalk
and street were paved with
diamond shaped stones. Look
ing above the bright shop win
dows one noticed that al
though they had two stories,
the houses appeared no taller
than bungalows
Each was of a different
hue than its neighbors, and
boasted some variation in
style of its stepped gable or
window moldings. Rows of
lights were stretched back and
forth over head and crossed in
a more elaborate pattern at
each corner
After visiting Ghent, where
he saw the famous altar piece
(the adoration of the mystic
lamb) by Hubert and Jan van
Eyck, young Philips traveled
to Paris,
Making part of the trip with
the operator of a camion
(truck), the student described
the ride as follows
"Though he said that it was
not a beautiful part of France.
the pale greens and browns of
the flat sparsely treed and
housed countryside impressed
me. As we moved south, the
coal mounds gave way com
pletely to farm land and the
autobahn turned into an older
but more scenic highway.
Fields Expansive
I was much surprised
at the expansive fields which
we traveled past -1 recall few
fences separating the cultivat
ed strips. The only buildings
between the small villages
were self - contained farm
houses-barn-tool shed clusters
. . passed an occasional farm
er guiding his plow along a
line of newly turned soil be
hind a two or three horse
team ..."
On his arrival in Paris the
traveler wrote:
"I made my way to the
Metro and quickly learned
that, like the tube in London,
it is far simpler to use than
New York's subway. After
looking up a 'friend of a
friend' only to find that our
mutual acquaintance had left
town that morning, I walked
wide-eyed and limber necked
down to la rive gauche' (the
left bank) where I found a
cheap room (like all cheap
rooms, at the top of a long
flight of stairs) in a small
hotel near le pont (bridge) St.
Michel.
"What does the city look
like? Three days aren't much
to go on, but one is safe in
saying that it has a lighter
mood than London or New
York. Its wide streets and
sub-skyscraper sized buildings
reveal more blue than one
sees in New York and the sky
hangs less closely over one's
ears than in the foggy capital
to the north.
"... Walking through the
famous Tuilleries gardens one
almost feels as if they were a
part of an art gallery (though
perhaps this is merely a sign
that he's still a stranger in
Paris).
"Although the famous build
ings of the city don't soar as
high as those on Manhattan,
their immense size is no less
impressive. The Louvre is a
case in point - It's the largest
palace ever built. Or possibly
their size is striking because
one's view of them is often
unobstructed.
"The Louvre, Les Invalides
(the soldiers hospital which
houses Napoleon's tomb),
Notre Dame, Le Pantheon -these
are bordered by parks
which allow a long unob
structed view ...
Domes of Marble
"Impressive are the dazzling
white" marble domes and tow
ers of the bascilica of Sacre
Coeur, which sits at the tip of
the old artist's quarter, Mont
martre ...
"And what of Paris' art?
Three days left time for only a
few hours in the Louvre and
the Musee d'Art Moderne. If
one prefers looking at pictures
in 'Life' to reading the schol
arly accounts of current news
in the Now York Times Sun
day edition, one will prefer
the Louvre to history text
books. .
"This thought is heresy
among contemporary art crit
ics, but for one who is low
brow enough to enjoy paint
ing as an expression of human
experience, this museum of
fers much more than man's
love of beauty alone
"With this reactionary
thought I'll skip over'Venus de
Milo, Mona Lisa, the hall of
wall-sized Rubens. et. al. and
pass on to the "purist, haven-
the modern art museum.
"The splashuig undulled pig
ments which characterize so
much post-impressionist paint
ing cover the walls of this
musee. Many ot tne works
were interesting to me; at
least an equal number left the
thought, "why would one do
that?"
The continual use of pure
pigments from all three corn
ers of the color chart seems
to be like singing at the top
of one's lungs it leave little
room for interesting variations
and soon becomes oppressive.
This general characteristic
of the majority of the works
here helps one appreciate
more subtle 'low key' paint
ings such as those of Bracque.
Another artist who appealed
to me was the famous color-
ist Matisse. He has no qualms
about bright hues but uses
them (I think) in a more con
trolled way; viewed from a
distance of 40 to 50 feet sev
eral of his canvasses are
among my favorites in the
Paris galleries.
Sentiment Apparent
But for all its art,- his
torical buildings and famous
monuments, Paris' character is
still most apparent in its
people. Through the visitor's
j-mble of preconceptions and
reactions of utter surprise
comes a realization that he has
left the serious propriety-
minded north and is now faced
with the latin sentiment which
exalts 'joie de vivre',
"Like all good generations,
the proof of this one lies in
the exceptions made to it - in
the recognition that all people
are alike in many ways and
further that each culture con
tains many elements which
seem to contradict the term
which best characterizes it
Certainly o n e (wouldn't
think of jbie de vivre in con
nection with a city which has
utterly homeless citizens
people with no roof over their
heads, whose usual practice is
to sleep over the hot air vents
from the subway. Have you
ever seen an old woman
stretched out asleep on the
sidewalk?" .
Nor does this latin temper
see.n related (save perhaps in
a negative way - indifference)
to the 'functionare' mentality
of the gendarmes who mean
der about with submachine
guns in hand (these are troubl
ed times) or run a poor for
eigner away from his rendez
vous spot under the Arch of
Triumph to make way for a
ceremony by a French version
of the American Legion run
him away without a word,
oblivious to his protestations
that he is a stranger and must
meet a friend here.
Meals Gendarme
"(Was I mad;jespecially be
a u s e my French offered
nothing nasty to say when I
saw there was no chance of
remaining.) ...
But I've been avoiding the
obvious what better indica
tion of a country's attitude to
Club Announces
Picnic in Park
Townsend club will meet
Wednesday, July 29, at 11
ajn. for a potluck picnic in
Hawthorne park. Watermelon
will be served by the club.
Each member is to take ta
ble service.
A program and music have
been promised following the
12:30 pjn. dinner.
Medford delegates to last
w e e k's National Townsend
club convention held at Mult
nomah hotel, Portland, will
report on the "parade of
states."
A special issue of the Wash
ington, D. C, Courier will
also give a complete story of
the recent 19th convention of
Townsend clubs of America.
Sauerkraut for snacktime:
Put a spoonful of drained,
chopped canned sauerkraut on
crackers spread with cheese.
Tour
ward life than the way its
women look after themselves?
On this point a walk down
the Champs Elysee is worth a
thousand of the best chosen
words.
"Without passing judgment
about what French girls (as,
say, compared with the Eng
lish) start out with, one can't
help admiring the finished
product.
And even if the second
look is a little disappointing
it remains true that the sec
ond look was evoked. Con
templating this side of the
French temperament, sooner
or later brings the Folies Ber-
gere to mind.
"Only this comment; though
one may not be shocked at the
Folies, I don't believe he will
escape surprise. Why? Is it
because, as in French cuisine,
the somewhat refined ap
proach bespeaks a long and
studied appreciation of the
subject? Qui Sait?
'.'At any rate I suppose that
we're used to differences in
people, and so can travel far
and yet feel at home among
individuals, while the things
which people value as a group
are more likely to catch our
attention as unusual."
Space Age and Old West
Dominate New Toy Crop
By GAY PAULEY
UPI Women's Editor
New York -flJPfl- Space age
fever and old west fervor run
an even race in the new crop
of toys,
P 1 a ythings
copied from
Cape Canaver
al have rocket
ed up there
with cowboy
and Indian re
galia at the
Toy Guidance
Council's 13th
Gy Pauley annual press
preview of What s wew lor
Children.
In the space department,
there are a parachute rocket
powered by water and air
pressure, with a nose cone
recovery attachment; a two-
stage lunar rocket which uses
harmless fuel to send it roar
ing some 300 feet skyward;
a center which propels models
of the Thor, Atlas and Titan
rockets by mechanical power;
a battery powered "count
down" rocket and missile
launcher, and an astronomy
set which, provides for star
gazing and equipment for pro
jecting film and slides on the
walls of a darkened room.
Melvin Freud, council presi
dent, said that the rash of
theater and television west
erns had stimulated the sale
of toys with the flavor of the
old west.
Historical Toys
On -display at the council
are electric train models of
the "iron horses" of a hundred
years ago. Shootin' irons run
the gamut from 50-shot re
peater pistols with built-in
sounds of ricochet, to belt
buckle pistols and guns in
holsters for little marshals.
Freud said the variety of
dolls, the all-time best seller
for girls, is more extensive
this year than ever. Included
are a group scaled to child-
size. The manufacturer check
ed government statistics be
fore producing dolls scaled to
six months, one, two, and
three-year-old children.
New also: A sick doll named
"Marybel." She comes down
with chicken pox or measles,
by attaching pink, spotted de-
Denver Steals
Fashion Thunder
Paris -(UPD-New York, Dal
las, San Francisco and Los
Angeles are going to take a
back seat to Denver, Colo., as
a fashion center next Septem
ber 5 because of the enter
prise of a French consul gen
eral.
Thanks to Claude Bautault
and the Denver city fathers,
who have organized the cur
rent celebration of the Colo
rado capital's centennial, Den
ver is going to be the scene of
as much excitement then and
the day after as this world
fashion capital is on the eve
of presenting its fall collec
tions. That's when 400 Denver
residents, who can afford to
fork over $25 apiece will see
80 handpicked Paris originals
designed by Paris' top 20
dressmakers.
The gowns are part of the
collections that more than 500
anxious newsmen and 1,000
buyers are awaiting to see un
veiled here beginning Sunday.
Kiev to Budgets!
Snider's
Quality DAIRY FOODS
Bridge Masters
Hold Tournament
Chicago-flJPD-The defending
titleholders led the qualifiers
today into the final two ses
sions of the masters mixed
teams of four, part of the 31st
annual summer tournament
of the American Contract
Bridge league.
Mr. and Mrs. William
Rosen, Chicago; Mrs. Leon
ard Goldstein and Leland
Ferer, both Miami Beach,
took the lead in a field of
114 teams when they scored
39VS matches out of a pos
sible 56.
The 58 teams remaining
begin the final two sessions
of play tonight, with the
champion to be decided Tues
day night.
Two teams were tied for
second after Sunday night's
competition at 39 matches.
They were the team of B.
Jay Becker, Howard Schen
ken and Mrs. ,Bea Gale, all
New York City; and Mrs.
Betty Goldberg and Julian
Adler, both" Baltimore," and
the team of Bud Creed,
Youngstown, Ohio; Mary and
Claire Tierman,- both Pitts
burgh; Mrs. Anne Pearson,
Benton Harbor, Mich., and
Martin Cohn, Detroit.
cats to her face. She also
comes accessorized with crut
ches and bandages for her
limbs, in case she really gets
battered.
The council was organized
21 years ago to encourage
manufacturers to child-test
toys before they went on the
market, and also to help pro
mote the sales of playthings
the year round instead of just
at Christmas.
Freud said that today "98
per cent of the manufacturers
support it on a voluntary
basis." A panel of six educa
tors, headed by Dr. Emma
Sheehy, professor of education
at Teachers college, Columbia
university, meets every two
weeks to judge new toys on
the basis of safety, construc
tion, and play and learning
value. . .
Freud said eight to 10 thou
sand toys are submitted each
year. About 475 get approval
of ' the panel and a select
group of jobbers. The latter
must buy a percentage of what
they okay.
Sometimes a toy. gets
thumbs down from the panel;
but the jobbers take it any
way because they believe it
will sell. One type is the
"paint by numbers" sets. Edu-
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Mrs. Nixon and Hostess
Agree on Peace of World
Leningrad, U.S.S.R. (UPD
Mrs. "Richard Nixon said to
day that no matter how much
their husbands argue in pub
lic, she and Mrs. Nina Khrush
chev agreed they should "pre
serve the peace" of the world.
In the midst of her whirl
wind tour of Leningrad, Mrs.
Nixon paused to teli the
women journalists with her
what it was like to sit in on
world-moulding political dis
cussions between the vice
president and top Soviet lead
ers.
She listened to Vice Presi
dent Nixon and Khrushchev
talk politics for about six
hours Sunday at Khrushghev's
country dacha.
The vice president's wife
did not go into the content
of the discussions among the
men. Instead she told from a
woman's personal viewpoint
of how the ladies sat in silence
- as women do the world over
- under a canopy after lunch
while their menfolk talked
over affairs of the world.
"After the discussion end
ed, we women agreed we had
to preserve the peace for our
children whom we loved so
Lodges to Hold
Picnic, Dance;
Governor Away
Medford Loyal Order of
Moose and Women . of the
Moose will hold the annual
picnic Sunday, August 16, and
a dance August 29. The dance
will begin the fall season of
activities for the lodge, and
tickets will be on sale begin
ning August 1.
Marion B. Castle was in
itiated at the last meeting.
Wilford Huffman, governor
of the Medford lodge, and his
family are vacationing a't the
seashore, and Harvey Wyatt,
junior governor, and his fam
ily are spending a vacation at
Willow Creek reservoir.
Women of the Moose have
a "secret pal" project under
way and women are invited
to call . Mrs. Kerr, SPring
2-4654, for further, informa
tion. cators say it does not encour
age a child's creative ability.
But it is a best seller.
High priced toys abound
this year. For the child who
has everything else, there is
an electric organ for $90 and
a pool table for $80. ,.
"Twenty years ago if a
manufacturer had offered a
toy other than , electric trains
for $90, he would have been
told to see a psychiatrist," said
Freud.
Lifetime
Tops
Only ....... $49.95
SSLr'H I Danish
much," Mrs. Nixon said.
Mrs. Nixon discussed her
day at the dacha while she
was touring the Palace of
Young Pioneers, a Communist
youth club, in Leningrad this
afternoon.
Late in the afternoon Mrs.
Nixon joined her husband and
First Deputy Premier Frol
Kozlov on a boat ride down
the Neva river to Peterhof,
Peter the Great's summer res
idence. Earlier, Mrs. Nixon and Mrs.
Kozlov engaged in peaceful
competition by walking
through another museum -the
famous Hermitage Mu
seum here.
Besides Mrs. Nixon and
Mrs. Kozlov, the group in
cluded Mrs. Yuri Zhukov,
wife of the Soviet Cultural
Committee chairman; and
Mrs. Llewellyn Thompson,
wife of the U. S. Ambassador
to the Soviet Union.
At the end of one hour and
40 minutes, Mrs. Nixon's lip
stick and red - flowered hat
were in perfect place.
While Mrs. Nixon roamed
the rooms filled with Titians
and Rembrandts, Mrs. Kozlov
headed for the nearest chair
to sit down.
"Oh," she moaned, and
pointed to her white shoes
with thick medium heels.
Mrs. Nixon's shoes had pencil-thin
high heels.
The vice president's wife
spotted Mrs. Kozlov resting
and went over to comfort her.
"Aren't you tired?" one of
the woman journalists with
the party hopefully asked
Mrs. Nixon. .
"Oh, my, no," laughed Mrs.
Nixon.
Mrs. Nixon and Mrs. Kozlov
appeared quite friendly. A
journalist agreed that the
stout Mrs. Kozlov had a pretty
face and a pleasant personal
ity. She wore a purple crepe
dress. Another member of the
party, the wife of the mayor
of Leningrad, wore a red vel
vet dress although the day
was very hot.
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Phones: NO 4-1226; NO 4-1227
Chairman -Announced
Mrs. A. J. Johannson of
Medford has been appointed
state fellowship chairman for -the
Oregon division of the
American Association of Uni-'
versity Women by Mrs. Carl
Brandenfels, state president.,
Mrs. Johannson is a past pres-.
ident of the Medford branch.;
As state chairman, Mrs.
Johannson is responsible for
directing and assisting the,
fellowship program for the
29 local branches of AAUW
in Oregon. She is a past pres-.
ident of the Medford branch.
The fourteen chairmen and
five elected officers of the
Oregon division met officially
for the first time at an AAUW;
state board meeting in Port-,
land Friday and Saturday."
Branch presidents are also.
members of the state board.
Business at the meeting,'
which will be in the auditor
ium of the Oregon Education,
building, will include pro
gram planning for both the
state division and local
branches.
There are approximately
3,000 members of AAUW in"
Oregon. Any woman who is
a graduate of an AAUW ap
proved college of university
is eligible for membership in
the organization.
To Elect
The annual election of offi
cers will be held by Foot
lighters at a meeting set for
tonight at 7:30 o'clock in the
little theater at the fair
grounds. NEW LIFE
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Medford