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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1960)
0 GRACE LUTUF.RAN CHURCH I ranees lane Albert Nlckodemus. pallor Sunday: Bible5 claTrSlmday Kh001 nd Tue'.d'.-?!-0'"' ""' nie'nf hls7oT;ain'ng 'n New - Wednesday: clals30 Pm'AduIt nforiaUon Saturday: 10 a.m. Confirmation classes SEVENTH DAY AUVENTIST Corner Clark and Garden wav Arthur F. Wellman, pastor Saturday: 0:30 a.m. Sabbath school 11 a.m. Worship hour Tuesday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting TRINITY EPISCOPAL 44 North Second st. Duane S. Alvord, rector Sunday: 10 a.m. Holy communion with sermon. Thursday: ' 3:30 p.m. Holy communion Saturday: 11 a.m. Junior choir CENTRAL POINT fin mm nv rim tot Third and Oak sts. Mr Jean M. Shelley, minister Sunday: 0:45 a.m. Sunday school 10:45 a.m. Worship service 6:30 p.m. Young people's meet ing. Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Midweek service FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Robert Olmsted, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Church school 11 a.m. Worship service 12 noon Coffee hour Thursday: 7:30 p.m. Choir LAND M ARK MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH (Independent) Townsend Club Bids. Pine St, Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 10:45 ajii. Worship service 7 p.m. Worship Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting anc Bible study. PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD Fifth and Pine sts. H. Patterson, pastor Sunday: 0:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 7:15 p.m. Evangelistic service Tuesday : 7:15 p.m. Bible study Thursday: , 7:15 p.m. PYPA EAGLE POINT SEVENTH-DAY ADVENT1ST Grange hnll John Trude, pastor H. J. Kegley, associate pastor Saturday: 0:30 a.m. Sabbath school tl a.m. Communion service. El der Trude, speaker Tuesday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting, wel fare bldg. Wednesday: 10 a.m. Dorcas welfare GOLD HILL ASSEMBLY OK GOD Fifth st. & 8th ave. Charles Pearson, pastor Sunday fi-45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 6:30 p.m. Youth service 7:30 p.m. Evangelistic service Thursday: 7:30 pjn. Bible and prayer hour CHRISTIAN CHURCH Corner Fourth st. and Sixth ave. Miss Jean Cunningham, minister Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service Thursday: 8 p.m. Prayer and Bible study COMMUNITY METHODIST CHURCH Corner 4th st. and 4th ave. Locklen Gregory, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service JACKSONVILLE H1RI.K CHURCH Old Protestant church (Across from Museum) James R. Hendricks, pastor Saturday. 8-12 midnight Watch night service Sunday: 10 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 7 p.m. Evening service Thursday; 7 p.m Prayer meeting F1PST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH King K Jones Jr.. pastor Sunday 9:45 a.m. Sunday .school 11 ajn. Worship ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC CMURCn Fr William McLeod Sunday: 9 a.m. Mass PHOENIX CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE 301 Third st. Walter C. Morris, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 7 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 7 p.m. Prayer and praise serv ice FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Second and Church sts. William S. Saladin, minister Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Church school 11 a.m. Morning worship 6:30 p.m. Christmas Essentials Class FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH Corner First and Rose sts. A L Craig, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday schooi 11 a.m. Worship service 6:30 p.m. Training union 7:30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m Prayer meeting 8 p.m. Bible study Thursday: 8 p m. Choir practice Saturdav: 7:30 p.m. Brotherhood and WMU SHADY COVE OUR LADY OF FATIMA CATHOLIC CHURCH Sunday 10 a.m. Mass ST. MARTIN'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH John S. Power vicar Sunday: . 0:15 a.m. Morning prayer and church school. TALENT FIRS1 METHODIST CHURCH First and Wagner sts. Earnest R. Bell, minister Sunday: 9:45 a.m Sunday school II a.m Worship service 6:30 p.m. Junior MYF 7 p.m Senior MYF Wednesday: 7 p.m. Scout meeting 7 p.m. Prayer meeting FRIENDS CHURCH A. Clark Smith, pastor Roland S. Hartley, assistant Sunday: 9 43 a.m. Sunday school 11 am Worship service 6 30 pm. Youth services 7 30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: , . 7 30 p.m. Midweek prayer Bible Study W.r;ER CREEK MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday. , 10 a.m. Sunday school Ex-Rogue Forest Ranger Transferred Portland - Reassignment of two forest officers in the Pa cific Northwest Region of the U.S. forest service has been announced by J. Herbert Stone, regional forester, Port land. Effective Jan. 8, William F. Cummins wiil transfer from the Ochoco National for est headquarters at Prineville, to the division of fire control in the regional office where he will work on fire trespass and law enforcement. Effective the same date, Pat N. Wick of the regional office will fill the Ochoco position being vacated by Cummins. Cummins has been on the Ochoco National forest super visor's staff as fire control arid land uses officer. Wick has been an information officer in the division of information and education in the Portland office since 1957. Cummins began forest serv ice work on the Rogue River National forest in 1D26. Stroudsburg, Pa.- (lll'li -Thomas Lincoln Waring, 58, brother of orchestra lc'ader Fred Waring, died Thursday. Three-Patch Quill Use scraps of fabric make a gay patchwork quilt this easy thrifty way. Three easy patches, repeated, form the design. , - . One block makes a pillow, Pattern 7003: chart; direc tions; pattern of patches; yardages for single, double bed quilts. Send Thirty-five cents (coins) for this pattern add 10 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, PAT TERN NUMBER. JUST OUT! OUR 1961 Needlecraft Book. Over 125 designs for home furnishings, for fashions knit, crochet, embroider, weave, sew, quill toys, gifts, bazaar items. FREE six designs for popu lar veil caps. Quick send 25c TODAY.1 ZION LUTHERAN "Now Is The Time" will be the sermon Sunday at the 11 a.m. worship hour by the Rev. H. C. Coovert, pastor of Zion Lutheran church, Fourth st. and Oakdale ave. The senior choir will sing. CHAPEL OF STAR The Rev. Marie Headlce, pastor, will speak on "This Is Elias" at the 3:30 p.m. wor ship service Sunday at the Chapel of the Star, Metaphys ical church, 89 Janney lane. Last Sunday following the service a party was held in the church cottage for the chil dren. Gifts were distributed. NEW AGE CHURCH "The World of Tomoirow" will be the subject of a lec ture at 2:30 p.m. Sunday by Dr. Dell E. Millard, at the New Age church, north of Eagle Point, on Hammel rd. Preceding the lecture there will be a fellowship dinner at 1 p.m. and a musical half- hour at 2 p.m. RURAL CHURCHES HKI1KAN BAPTIST CIILRCII (Conservative) Whilf City Crater Lake hwv. & Avenue A Ray Nelson, pastor Sunday: 0:45 a.m. Sunday school 1 1 a in Morning worship 630 p.m. Baptist youth 7:30 p.m Evening service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Bible study ai.d prayer service CII.APEI. IN THK PINKS Church of The Nazarene Prospect. Gcorse L. Fitch, minister Sunday: 0:45 a.m Sunday school 1 1 a m. Worship 6 30 p m. Junior service 6:30 p m. Ynune people meeting 730 p.m Evenine service MEADOWS UNION SUNDAY SCHOOL Junction Meadows & Ramsey Canvon rds. Sunday: 10 ajn. Sunday school fl "iff! I ' - 'fell v lvf ' HHth i ' v " , Vs . li ' . 4Fh "s r'. C-v . f y r.r , - - x v A .. " . vvA "Jls II 1 fe i ' , T -tn ,"i t j LIBRARY GALLERY A special panel for the display of paintings' was recently in stalled in the Public Library of Medford and Jackson county by the Southern Oregon Society of Artists, allowing library patrons to view the wide variety of work being done by local artists. The paintings will be changed once a month. Above, George John son, president of the society, hangs a paint OF SMITH & MEN By Jack Smith (c) 1060 Tlmcs-Mlrror Syndlcato The year being at an end, it is time once again to an swer my mail. I try to answer every letter during the year, especially those that aren't written by people who are under the im pression they are writing to smiling Jack Smith, or whis pering Jack Smith, or some fellow they loaned a fin to at the World's Fair in 1935. Unfortunately, I am always putting letters aside in unlike ly places for safekeeping and they don't turn up until De cember, when I go through my desk, my sock-and-under-wear drawer and my pockets. I'd like to acknowledge some I may have missed . Thanks to a lady in Pasa dena, Calif., for a postcard advising that if you freeze Brazil nuts you can crack the shell without breaking the meat. She also pointed out that if I wore wool or nylon socks I wouldn't have to wear gar tors. That is a lot of good ad vice to get on one 3-ccnt post card. A man named Smith wrote from the Hotel Phinscn, Bane- gaards-pladsen, Aalborg, Den- To Size 48 FACE-FLATTERING as the softest night lighting that's the effect of this curved, draped neckline. See how it dramatizes the quiet, slim ming lines below. For crepe, faille, wool. Printed Pattern 9279: Wom en's Sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46. 48. Size 36 takes 3',i yards 39-inch. Send T h i r t y-f i v o cents (coins) for this pattern add 10 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept.. 232 West 18th St., New York 11, NY. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STLYE NUMBER. New! Send now for our 1960 Fall and Winter Pattern Catalog every page in ex citing color! Over 100 styles for all sizes, all occasions plus school . , . 35c. 9279 J V 34-48 Sf I MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. ORE. mark, that he had just bought new Karmann - Ghia and planned to visit me in the fall of 1961 after attending the Music Festival at Edin burgh. The telephone number of the Prinsen is Aalborg 3-3144 if you want to check that out. On April 27, I960, a Miss Wooden wrote to point out that I spelled five words wrong in a single story. They were cauliflower, acccllerator, parallel, picnicking and whis ky. Her letter was in verse: "While reading about words that are hard to spellI came across some that rang a bell Your spelling of whiskey (or whisky) didn't quite fit Did you misspell words just for the H of it?" Yes, Miss Wooden. A lady who owns, a beauty establishment in Beverly Hills wrote that she can toll when there is going to be an earth. quake, as I can. She said her family is not welcome in Wyo ming any more because every time one of them turns up there it quakes. I have a nice letter from a lady named Wolcott who says "I am very grateful to you for being a screwball." She said she gets a laugh out of me but is worried about Jack Kennedy. A Mrs. Spence wrote that peanut butter was invented by George W. Carver. She pointed out that Carver wasn't born until around 1864 so no body could have been eating peanut butter at Gettysburg the day Lincoln gave his ad dress. A man named Beardsley wrote a card claiming that the two-headed floor lamp he bought from the Goodwill must have been the one I gave them, because he no sooner had it in his house than it attacked him. A Mr. Gregory wrote that he once knew a Jack Smith who rode in a bicycle race in Sioux Falls, S. D., about 1896. A " woman named Mamie Van Doren wrote on April 22, asking, "Why do you get hives from lobster? I don't" Her stationery has scalloped gold edges with little pink roses Family Weekly gives you a picture story biography of some new, some vet erans and some glamorous hopefuls in the article, January 1st Thit fascinating story In Family Weekly with your. Medford Mail Tribune pV3ri them l in 61" ing while Librarian Omar Bacon and Mrs. Jack Mitchell, chairman of the exhibit proj ect, look on. The new panel, made of insu lating board covered with burlap, is easy to fasten the paintings to and will not show nail holes. The panel is large enough to display eight to 12 paintings at a time, Johnson said. in the corners. It wasn't per fumed. A Mr. F. Kuehnast, of Ste vens Point, Wis., advised: "Whether you are married or single . . . you are sure miss ing something out of this world if you have never tasted a black walnut cake." I have several notes touch- ing on birdwatching or the morals of cats, but hope to answer them individually and privately. To all, a happy new year. Fire on Carrier Claims 50th Victim New York-(UPII-The Dec. 19 fire aboard the Navy super carrier Constellation at the Brooklyn Navy Yard claimed its 50lh victim Thursday. Paul Bua, 59, Brooklyn died at Brooklyn hospial as the result of a fractured skull and other injuries received during the $75 million fire aboard the unfinished carrier, the hospital reported. Washington ttlHI Interior Secretary Fred A. Scaton said Thursday, the value of min eral output in the United Stales in 1960 reached an esti mated $17.8 billion. Kim ... ,: i Family Council Editor'! Note: The Family Conn. ell consists or a Judge, a psychia trist, three clcrnymen. a newspaper editor, a womrn's editor and two writers. Each article Is a summary of an actual case history. Th Council reports on problems that have been dealt with by respon sible agencies and counselors. Mrs. D.N. - I wish my son would get married. Antony N. - Why look tor trouble? This way I have no problems. Mrs. D.N. - Tony is 33 years old. Even though I'm his mother, I can describe him as tall, dark and handsome. With a good Job as a news photographer, he'd certainly be a catch for some young lady. But nothing happens. This one's too skinny, that one's too dumb, this one's too ex pensive, that one's got hay fever. He's taken dozens of lovely girls out and you'd think he'd run out of reasons for dropping them. But no. Tony seems to be looking for some creature that's in his mind, or in heaven, but not yet on earth. He can't live with me for ever. His friends are all mar ried. Why doesn't he look to the future, and then close one eye and pick somebody? Anthony N. - Aren't there some people who are belter off unmarried? I'm satisncd the way things are. If I were to force myself to marry for my mother s sake, I might be making her happy but I'd be making myself and some In nocent girl miserable. I love my work and it re quires freedom. I must be able to up and go to Mexico or Japan or wherever a juicy assignment calls me. I d be a terrible husband. I'm just not the type. At present, I have no prob lems. I'm enjoying most of the comforts my married friends have, plus my inde pendence. As to the future, my mother shouldn't worry She knows I make the best pot roast in the family! The Council: Despite An thony's confident boast that he has no problems, they seem to be sticking out like pin feathers in an inadequate ticking. The biggest is his refusal to admit he has 'em! We all do. Only the dead and the de ranged can escape them. His only choice in the matter is which set of problems he pre fers. Next comes the problem of facing problems - examining Superbly Tender and Juicy Fully Smoked and Skinned Lean and Tender, Medium Size Hams, From 5 to 7 lbs. The flavor, Is dollciously mild, When you buy a half ham at Safeway, you get a full half . . with no center slices re moved. Whole or shank half. Beautiful Red Ripe- TOMATOES Fully ripened ond waiting to add glamour to your favor ite salad recipe, sandwiches, or sliced side dishes. We guarantee each and every one to please you 100. each tube 2 STORES TO SERVE YOU Scientists Discuss Psychological Diet To Reduce Weight By DELOS SMITH UPI Science Editor New York (UPD Scientific psychological dieting was ex pounded at 1960's last science meeting loaay. It's a lot of trouble but it takes fat off people perma nently which can t be said in ii instances i o r dieting with calories, tv " w h e ther liq - ..i j i ueios sniiih Hid, egg - and- celery or whatever. The idea is to create in one s sell a psychological aversion to eating too often, loo much and to ever eating the things which many con sider the most delicious of all - the luscious piece of pie and ice cream with the goo on top. and resolving them, one by one, with outside guidance if necessary. We're sorry to stir up the calm seas of Tony's rationali zations. But the seas are calm only because the sun is shin ing right now on an attractive man of 33 with a good job and an Indulgent mother. Mrs. N. is right in urging her son to look ahead. A good pot roast isn't sufficient storm equip ment. Tony may well remain single. He can get ear plugs to silence Mom. He can even hand her that "no prob lems" bit as his reason. But he can't kid himself. Whether he marries or not, his decision must be based upon true self knowledge, self - understand ing and self-acceptance. Then he will realize that he's not avoiding problems but merely swapping them for an assort ment he can cope with. In grappling with the pros and cons of marrlaje for him self, Tony will have to an swer questions such as these: Am I unmarrigeable? If so, why? Is it my temperament? My needs and goals .In life? Or is it an inability to "give," to share? Is it a fear of fail ure? Or a fear of rejection? Is there a mother-son impasse? Or is it just that I don't know yet what I require In a mate? Tony's problems require answers, not denial. And a good "catch" has plenty of problems whether he ever gets "caught" or not. (Copyright 1960, General Features Corp.) nnnnn LnJZAAUUU Medium Kmmm b $M FRIDAY. DECEMBER Dr. C. B. Ferstcr of Indi ana University unfurled a full-blown psychological tech nique for thinning the plump and the fat at the meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Sci ence. Details remain to be worked out but the basic means have been proved. He and his colleagues, Drs. John I. Nurnberger and Eu gene E. Levitt, experimented with four self - consciously overweight women. They be gan with the one fundamental Funeral Saturday for President Polk's Kin Portland -(UPI- Services will be held Saturday for Walter P. Runic y, great-g r a n d- ncphew of President Polk who died here Tuesday at the age of 59. Ramsey served as commo dore of convoys in the Atlan tic in World War II. He was a former professor of naval science and tactics at the University of Washing ton, and was vice president of the Navy League. PRE-INVENTORY Reg. $4.99 Yd. Tapestry... ..........Now $2.99 Yd. Reg. 4.99 Yd. Supported Plastic, Now 2.99 Yd. Reg. 6.50 Yd. Naugaweave Now 2.99 Yd. Reg. 7.90 Yd. Nylon Now 3.99 Yd. Reg. 9.90 Yd. Nylon Mohair Now 4.99 Yd. Reg. 6.50 Yd. Chrom-Spun Now 2.99, Yd. Reg. 7.90 Yd. Mohair.... Now 3.99 Yd. Reg. 4.90 Yd. Cotton Stripe Now 2.99 Yd. Reg. 4.90 Yd. Cotton Now 1.99 Yd. Reg. 3.99 Yd. Cotton Now .99 Yd. Terms Available Bale's 3Upf)oIster2 1920 Table Rock Rd., across from the Big Y Phone SP 3-6461 , Medford' Volume Upholstery Fabric Dealer PILLSBURY OR BALLARD BISCUITS 1U Take your pick at this special low price. 30. 1960 thing which eating is, namely a simple reflex. Food is placed in the mouth. Reflexively mouth juices flow and the stomach prepares itself for business. People All Different Unhappily for the science of psychology people are all different. The technique will have to be more or less indi vidually tailored to individu als, ?nd by qualified psycholc gists. Ferster gave one exam ple of how it worked in one woman. She was conditioned to think of her husband sneer ing at the fat on a female passer-by as she took her first mouthful. Ferster made no enthused claims for the technique. In the main, he wanted col leagues to take it up and work; out the details and make it Into something which could become an effective weapon in America's No. 1 health problem, life-shortening, sickness-inviting obesity. Choice Selection New Year's Cards Medford E. Main Plllsbury buttermilk or Ballard sweet milk refrigerated, ready-to-bake bis cuits. Limit, 5 please. fJC 8-oz. SAVE, SAVE, SAVE gold Pi:: STAMPS Yeu get valuable prizes plus savings when you shop at Safeway.