-1-
'LTR:BUN(,M4fw4,Or.
Sunday, Feb. 7, 190
j 'j I ' 1 '
BJeeWMM
School Mews
HONORARY RANK A snappy salute is given Col. Marcus
A. Kipp at the infantry training center at Fort Dix, N.J., by
Eugene Lundgren, 7, of Chatham, N.J., who was given a
uniform and honorary rank of infantry captain after he had
written the Post Exchange: "My dad is dead. He was a
regular Army man and I want to be like he was." The boy's
father, Capt. George H. Lundgren, was a World War II com
bat veteran and died in 1956. (UPI Telephoto)
(ft .71 jfS
DAVID CURZON
New YMCA Official
Physical Director
Named at YMCA
-. New physical director . at
the Medford YMCA is David
Curzon, formerly of Pocatel-
lo, Ida.
Curzon was graduated from
Idaho State college in Poca
tello Jan. 22 where he ma
jored in education and physi
cal education.
' While attending college,
Curzon became interested in
YMCA work and served as
physical director at the Poca'
tello, Ida., YMCA for two
years.
. t Curzon's specialties are
aquatics, midget and senior
league basketball, wrestling
and tumbling. He will also ad
vise parents and set up pro
grams for children who need
certain types of physical ex
. ercise for strength develop
ment.
Curzon was also graduated
from the Inkom, Ida. high
school where he was active in
all sports. Following high
school he served four years
in the U.S. Navy.
Curzon with his wife, Jer
ry, daughter Shelley, 10
months, and son, Mitchell, 5,
will live at 828A West 14th
St., Medford. The family at
tends the Church of Jesus
Christ of the Latter-day
Saints.
Medico Society Will
Meet Wednesday Night
A dinner meeting of the
Jackson County Medical So
ciety will be held Wednesday,
Feb. 10, 7 p.m. at the Rogue
Valley Country club.
Important business will be
discussed, Dr. Alan S. Mar
kee, secretary, reported. Hosts
for the meeting will be Drs.
Thomas Rutter, William Sjam
mons and Richard Schwahn.
Famous Scene
MM!
Editor & Publisher reports
that daily newspapers in the
U. S. and Canada reject each
year advertising worth mil
lions of dollars because it
does not meet standards of
"truthfulness and good taste."
Says Cranston Williams, gen
eral manager of ANPA, ". . .
the daily newspaper puts its
integrity ahead of all other
considerations in preserving
its standard as a truthful
source of information for
readers and a means of dis
seminating truthful messages
through advertising."
Needle-art! It's fascinating
to crochet this accurate copy
of a historic American event.
The signing of The Declara
tion of Independence-a fam
ous painting, translated into
filet crochet. Pattern 7230:
chart; directions in 5 sizes.
Send THIRTY-FIVE
CENTS (coins) for this pat
tern-add 5 cents for each pat
tern for lst-class mailing.
Send to Medford Mail Trib
une, Household Arts Dept.,
P. O. Box 168, Old Chelsea
Station, New York 11,'N.Y.
Print plainly NAME, AD
DRESS, ZONE, PATTERN
NUMBER.
JUST OUT! Our New 1960
Alice Brooks Needlecraft
Book contains THREE FREE
Patterns. Plus ideas galore
for home furnishings, fash
ions, gifts, toys, bazaar sellers
-exciting, unusual designs to
crochet, knit, sew, embroider,
huck weave, quilt Be first
with the newest send 25
cents now!
NO SPARKS! NO SMOKE!
NO FLOOR DRAFTS! LOWERS FUEL BILLS!
Unifona hMt from sor I wiling. lra wood,
pmto-lo? or briqiMH- Yao control fif ... your
boil and family toff I
Hedrick Junior High
By VICKI TOENNIGES
The second meeting of the
Hedrick Parent Teacher asso
ciation will be held on Mon
day, Feb. 8 in the little thea
ter. On the program are Miss
Sue Jahn, who will give an
oration; Robert L. Haworth,
director of parks and recrea
tion of Medford; and Lee
Ragsdale, director of physical
education, recreation and
safety of Medford public
schools.
Art students from Hedrick
sent entries to the Annual
Scholastic Art contest to be
held at the J. K. Gill com
pany, Portland.
The Medford American
Association of University
Women's annual art show was
held last week end at the
Medford hotel. Some work of
Hedrick art students was in
cluded in the show. Miss
Catherine Fonken was chair
man of the event.
Report cards went home
Wednesday for the second
nine weeks grading period.
The Stinger drill team has
been holding practices all
week in the gym.
Wrestling equipment was
turned in last week and wres
tlers met to elect the out
standing wrestler from each
grade. Results will be an
nounced soon at an assembly.
New hunter safety course
participants met Thursday
last week.
Mrs. Vida McCarley's eighth
grade science class has sched
uled a field trip to the United
States weather station at the
Medford airport Tuesday aft
ernoon to observe how fore
casting is done and the instru
ments used. While at the air
port, the students, as guests
of one of the airlines, will go
through a DC-7.
The girls' volleyball intra
murals were concluded last
week and results were: ninth
grade, Kookies, first; Black
and Blue Eyes, second; Cha
Cha Chas and Black Widows
tied for third; Chain Gang,
fourth; and the Beatniks,
fifth,
Eighth grade, Speed Balls,
first; Bouncing Beauties, sec
ond; Flying Saucers, third;
High Balls, fourth; the Bull
Dozers and Volleying Vikings
tied for fifth.
Seventh grade, Volleyettes,
first; . the Bubly Balls, Hor
nets and the High Flies, three
way tie for second; the Sting
ettes, third; and the Butter
cups, fourth.
Talent High School
Edited by members of
Quill & Scroll
LaVonne Whillock, President
Talent High student coun
cil has been working on the
Sweethearts' Ball which will
be held Friday, Feb. 26, in
the high school gymnasium.
The theme "Sweet and Love
ly" has been chosen. Mem
bers of the council have
been assigned tasks to com
plete. Programs have been
selected.
Candidates for king and
queen s from the junior class
are Bob Jacobs, Bob Dickin
son, Diane DeLuca and Bar
fa a r a McAbee. Candidates
from the senior class are Mike
Jacobs, Morris Sterrett, Mary
Lee Clark and Jill Morrison.
The student council plans to
begin decorating a week in
advance of the dance to avoid
a last minute rush.
Sixteen Talent High stu
dents obtained honor roll rat
ing, all B's or better, for the
second nine weeks, while 22
maintained this rating for the
semester.
They are: freshmen, Mike
Clifton, Laren Crawford, San
dra Holt, Teresa Diederich,
Donna Hill, Gail Scharfe;
sophomores, Sandra Dickin
son, Jean Sterrett, Linda
Thompkins; juniors, David
Fisher, Pat Diederich, Vir
ginia Johnson, Linda Hamil
ton, Elizabeth King; and
seniors, Dolores Meyer, Jo
anne Hill, Jill Morrison, Kath
leen Bruzelius, LaVonne
Whillock, Gail Carter, Sally
Kenyon.
At the combined executive
board meeting of the Talent
and Phoenix PTA's recently,
it was decided to have one
PTA organization for the dis
trict. As a result of this ac
tion, the Phoenix chapter
officers will hold their pres
ent positions for the coming
year, while Talent officers
will act in an advisory ca
pacity. Talent grade school Princi
pal Eugene Farthing said,
"The important thing is that
we are now District 4, not
two separate districts, and
should act as such."
The first meeting of the
combined chapters will be
held in March at Phoenix.
Meetings will alternate be
tween the two schools thereafter.
In the commercial depart
ment, Sandra Dickinson earn
ed a 35-word pin in Typing I,
and Sally Helm, Jean Sterrett
and Diane DeLuca each made
a 30-word award pin.
Five students in a class of
seven in Shorthand II have
obtained a speed of 100 words
per minute or over. They are
Sally Kenyon, LaVonne Whil
lock, Jill Morrison, Dolores
Meyer, and Gail Carter. Mary
Lee Clark and Myrna Ford
have received their 80-word
awards.
Office practice class began
a project on clerical payroll
procedures this week. Stu
dents will be instructed in all
payroll procedures, including
time records, method of com
puting earnings, and prepara
tion of payroll records as well
as Federal and state reports.
All of the material to be cov
ered is typical of procedures
actually found in modern busi
ness office.
The editor and staff of the
1960 Challenger have been
working to complete pages
for their deadline. A photog
rapher from Kennell Ellis was
here Friday to take more pic
tures. Pages that went in
were football, advertising,
clubs, and social activity. The
book is now about 23 completed.
Progress is being made and
near completion for many
projects in the mechanical art
department of Shop I and II.
Furniture under construction
is practical and imaginative
and ranges from cedar chests
and chess sets to gun car inets,
desks, and folding dining room
tables.
In German I class this year
we have started something
new. John Kuchler has di
vided the class into two
groups according to grades.
The "A" and "B" students
are in the first group which
will advance faster and have
more reading. The second
group, composed of other stu
dents, mainly will work on in
creasing their vocabulary.
This method of teaching has
greatly helped each student.
The Army is experimenting
with sandbags made of knit
ted paper. They have sur
vived 60-day tests in severe
weather.
Don't Read This!
... unlete you respect your trees and prop
erty Our windy season is here for a while,
so let us top or trim those dangerous trees
before they damage your property or ruin the
tree in breaking. We go anywhere; no dis
tance too far Free estimates given
Specializing in removing r'angerous trees
Licensed and Insured.
RAY CHAMBERLAIN TREE SERVICE
Phone SP 2-8052
Andalusia, Spain, is where l Wild rice Is B extensive
half the world's supply of crop in the lake regions of
olive oil comes from. Minnesota.
How yon may
charge bobij at
"Uonijland"...
THE ORE-STOP
STORE FOB TODB
UOHET HEEDS!
Yes, now there's a financial store
where yeii may charge money
bout like charging a hat or a pair of
shoes m a regular department store!
It's "M0NEYUN0" (your nearby
Pacific Finance office) -the store
that's set up to handle your money
Chir(in money is about like cnr(n myth
e
needs, quickly and courteous.
So whatever you need money for-Is
reduce monthly payments, te tske
care of first-of-the-year expenses,
to take a trip, to buy your family the
things they want and need-come to
"M0NEYLAN0"and say. "charge it.1"
n( else -you borrow it now, pay H beet later.
PACIFIC E3 FINANCE
"Monejland"
(All loans made under the Oregon Industrial Loan Art)
16 South Central Phone SP 3-5308
Bob Griffith, Manager
Open Weekdays: 9:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.
Mondays Until 8 P.M. Closed Saturdays
t
Horn'
F
yiroDD
SMinieis
JUL.
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Free padding with
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Mow only U)95
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Yard
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JEM FmCPUCC I0TN W KICaT. ICCEIVE CalarM Uoklrt FREE!
or Phone) SP 2-7166 Easy Terms
Smith-Dynge Lmbr. Co.
Corner of 8th and Fir
117 S. Central, SP 3-7301
Open Monday 'Til 9 FREE PARKING
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