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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (July 27, 1962)
PILGRIM HOLINKSS CHLRCU H2U tdt Jackson it. George Moran. minister Sunday 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 7:30 p m. Evangelistic service Wednesday: 7 30 pjn Prayer meeting 8 AC It hi) HEART CATHOLIC 32b South Oakdale ave. Priests. Fr. Carl Mai. Fr. John A. IIr, Fr William McLeod Sunday : 6. 7. 8:30, 10 & 11:30 a m. Mats 2 p m. Baptisma 7 pm Mas Monda 8 p.m. Inquiry class for adults Wednesday: 7 JO pm. Perpetual help devo tlons and benediction Thursday: 4-5:30 St 7:30-9 p.m. Confession Friday: 6 30. 8 St 11 a.m. First Friday Masses 6 p.m. Mass Saturday: 8 a.m. Fatima devotions follow ing mass 4-5.30 St 7:30-9 pjn. Confession Daily. 6:30 it 8 a.m. Mais ST. LUKE'S METHODIST 2940 Siskiyou blvd. Charles McDonald, pastor Sunday 9:30 a.m. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. Worship service. 8T. MARK S EPISCOPAL CHURCH Fifth st. and N Oakdale ave. G. R. V Bolster, rector LeRoy E Cox assistant 6th Sunday after Trinity: 8 a in. Holy communion 9:45 a.m. Nursery 10 a.m. Morning prayer with sermon. Friday 11 a.m. Holy communion SALVATION ARMY Beatty and Edwards sta. Maj. William Ricken. commanding officer Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a in. Holiness meeting 11 a.m. Junior soldiers 11-30 a m. Junior legion 3:30 p.m. League of Mercy er vices 4 p.m. Corps cadets class 8:30 p.m. Young people's legion 6:30 p.m. Open air service 7 p m Salvation meeting Tuesday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting Wednesday: 7 p.m. Teenage club Thursday: 10 a.m. Day home league 7 p m Night home league Friday : 6 pm. Junior youth activities Saturday: 7 p.m. Songsters practice 8 p.m. Bible study SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST 1900 Greenwood dr, Duane Corwin, assistant pastor Saturday: 9:30 a.m. Sabbath school 11 a.m Worship hour 4 p m Missionary Volunteers Wednesday: 10 a.m. Dorcas 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting TRINITY BAPTIST (Conservative 2645 South Stage rd. Bruce Rogers, presiding pastor Sunday. 10 a.m Sunday school & prayer meeting 11 a.m. Worship service 7:30 p.m. Youth fit adult groups 8:15 p.m. Communon service UNITY CENTER OF MEDFORD Corner Haven St Holly, church 995 So. Oakdale. center Katharine Bosworth, minister Sunday: 9:43 a.m. Church school 11:15 a.m. Worship service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Fireside circle, at cen ter. VALLEY VIEW SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST CHURCH South Stace rd. Arvin Winkle, pastor Saturday: 9:30 a m. Sabbath school 4 p.m. Missionary volunteers Tuesday: 10 a.m. Dorcas Wednesday: 8 p.m. Prayer meeting WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN 200O Oakwood dr. John O Reynolds, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Church school 11 a.m. Morning worship 7 p.m Senior high fellowship Wednesday: 8 p.m. Midweek study fellow ship Thursday: 12:30 p.m. Junior high fellow ship ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH, ULCA Fourth and Oakdale Harvev C. Coovert. pastor 6m Sunday after Trinity: 9:30 am. Sunday school 9:30 a.m. Worship service 1 p.m. Congregational picnic COUNTY CHURCHES ASHLAND FIRST METHODIST CHURCH North Main and Laurel sts. P. Mnicolm Hammond, minister David Coulter, associate minister Sunday. 9:43 a.m. Church school 8:30 & 11 a.m. Morning worship GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Frances lane Albert R Nickodcmus, pastor Sundav 9 45 a m. Sunday school and Bible class 8:30 a.m. Worship service CENTRAL POINT CHl'RCH OF CHRIST Third and Oak Sts. Mr Jean M. Shelley, minister Sunday: 8:45 a.m. Sunday school 10:45 am Worship service 6 30 p m. Youth meetings 1:30 p.m. Evening service. COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH Pa::l A. Kroon, pastor. Sunday: p 45 am. Sunday school 11 am. Morning worship 3 p.m. B a p ti i m a 1 service, Shady Cove 6 30 pm Pmver pals. Jets ca dets Junior high young people, senior high, voung adults, preserv Ice prayer meeting. 7 30 pm. Gospel hour. Wednesday: 7 nm rhoir oractlce 8 p m Midweek prayer meet ing ana uime siuay. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rnhert Olmsted, pastor Sundav: 0 45 a m. Church school Ham Worship service 12 noon Coffee hour PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOD Filth and Pine sta. Andrew W. Rahn, pastor Sunday: 9 45 a.m. Sunday school 11 am Morning worship 7 no p.m. Evangeliitic service Tuesday: 7 30 p.m. Bihla Study Thursday: 7:30 pm Young peoples meet in i EAGLE POINT COMMUNITY BIBLE CHURCH B street Warren L. Christensen. minister Sunday ; (5 m Sunday school 1 1 a m Worship 7 pm Youna people's service pm Evening service Wednet-flav; 6 30 p rn Choir practice I pm Prayer meeting and Bi ble study GCLD HILL A'SF.MRl.Y OF GOO Fiftn ave Charles Pearson, pastor Sundav 9 45 a m Church school II im Worship lervice 7 in pm Evangelistic services Wednedav: 7 30 p m Bible study & prayer Thursday : a 30 a m Women's prayer meet- r Church of Brethren Topic Announced The Rev. William Wash., minister of Medford Church of the Brethren, will speak on the topic "Working for God" at the 11 a m. service Sunday. "Thinking of Others" will be the children's story given by Mrs. Wash. "Spirit of the Living God" will be given by the rythm choir directed by Miss Bar bara Ristity, accompanied by organist Miss Shirley White head. The church will have their quarterly council meeting Sunday afternoon following a potluck dinner for the con gregation after the morning service. Christian Science Topic Announced Progress depends on spirit ually meaningful activity. This will be the theme of the lesson-sermon entitled "Truth" at First Church of Christ. Scientist, 100 Wind sor ave., Sunday at 11 a.m. The next will be from II Timothy 2. Young people up to the age of 20 are invited to attend Sunday school. All are in vited to attend the services. CHRISTIAN CHURCH Corner Fourth st. and Sixth ave. Miss Jean Cunningham, minister Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worshio service Thursday: 7 :30 p.m. Bible study and prayer CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY OF GOLD HILL Fifth st and 4th ave. Sunday: v:do a.m. bund ay scnooi 11 a.m. Mornina service Wednesday: p.m. Testimonials COMMUNITY METHODIST Corner 4th st. and 4th ave. Lockien Gregory, pastor Sunday a:5 a.m. Sunday scnooi It a.m. Worship service 6:30 pm. Senior MYF JACKSONVILLE ASSEMBLY OF GOD Fifth and Blackstone O. E. Summers, pastor Sundav 9:45 a m. Sunday school 11 a.m Worship 6:30 p m. Youth service 7:30 n m. Evangelistic service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Bible study and pray er hour FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH King K. Jones Jr.. pastor Sunday: 9:30 a.m. Sunday school 11 am Worship 1 p.m. All church picnic ST. JOSEPH'S CATHOLIC Fr William McLeod Sunday: u a.m. Mass PHOENIX FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Corner First and Rose sts. A L. Craig, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 6:30 p.m. Training union 7:30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Prnyer meeting 8:15 p.m. Bible study SHADY COVE OUR LADY OF FATIMA CATHOLIC CHURCH Sunday: 10 a.m. Mass TALENT FRIENDS CHURCH A. Clark Smith, pastor Roland E. Hartley, assistant Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 7:30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting RURAL CHURCHES BEnEAN BAPTIST CHURCH Conservative) White City Crater Lake hwy. & Avenue A Richard A. Hadeen, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a.m. Sunday school 11 a.m. Morning worship 6:30 p.m. Baptist youth fellow ship 7:30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 7:30 p.m. Midweek prayer serv ice COUNTRY CHURCH Midway Four Corners 5255 Table Rock rd. Ernest E. Ralls, pastor Sunday: 9:45 am. Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service 7:30 p.m. Evening service Wednesday: 7 30 p.m. Bible study prayer GIBBON ACRE. PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF GOI1 13! Gibbon rd. Benny Ivey, pastor Sunday: 9:45 a nv--Sunday nchool 11 am. Worship service 7 p.m. Evangelistic service Wednesday: 7 p.m. Bible study Thursday: 9 30 a.m. PLA Friday: 7:30 p.m. Young people's meet ing MEADOWS UNION SUNDAY SCHOOL Junction of Meadows and Ramsey Canvon rds. Lester Wilcox Jr., pastor Sundav: 10 a m Sunday school 11 a.m. Worship service PROSPECT BAPTIST (Southern Bsptlit) Coinmitnttv hall Kirk Snider, interim pastor Sunday: 9 45 a m Sunday school It am Worship servire 6 30 pm. Baptist Training union 7 30 pm. Evening worth ip Wednesday: 7.30 pm Prayer meeting SAMS VMJ.tV COMMUNITY i Interdenominational) School nnuse. John Roe Ms. pailor. Sunday . 10 am Sunday srhool. SAMS AM F.YC.OSPEL i Nondennm (national i Gordon Peterson, pastor Sunday: 10 a m Sunday school 11 am Morning worship 7:30 p m Evening service TRAIL COMMUNITY CHl'RCH Jnhn S Kiee, pastor Sunday 9 45 a m Sunday srhool 11 am Mnrnirg worship 7pm Evening service Tueda v 730 p m Young people s meet, mi Wedr-esdav: no pm Bible study and jrajer service Kennedy's Confidence in Idea of Peace Corps Justified by Results By HARRY FERGUSON Washington - IUPU - In these days when President Kennedy is hearing more from Con gress and en- joying it less, i.tgne can see solace In re- r n 1 1 i n 0 the a,. u .. . .. ";J urhat DnnAnr. " I' o b e a ess throw the dice mrry Ftnuion ana came up with a natural. No project of the Kennedy administration started out with such dim prospects as the Peace Corps. The measure of its success is that Sen. Barry Goldwater, who is almost always on the other side of a high fence from Kennedy, has said kind words about it. His son, Barry Jr., even has discussed with his father the possibility of joining the Peace Corps with out causing a parental explo sion. The Peace Corps was born in March, 1961, at a time when Kennedy was new in of fice, fresh in viewpoint and full of confidence. Hidden around the curves that fill the road of the future were such things as the defeat of his farm bill, his debacle on the issue of medical care for the aged and Billie Sol Estcs. Deep Plunge He took a deep plunge and launched the Peace Corps by violating almost every rule that a President should ob serve in his relationship with Congress: He didn't even wait to consult Congress. He created the Peace Corps by executive fiat. He financed its opening stages with money drawn from an emergency fund that is at the disposal of the White House, thereby assuming per sonal financial responsibility for the success or failure of the project. At a time when there was muttering about a Kennedy dynasty because of the ap pointment of his brother as attorney general, he named a member of his family to head the Peace Corps - Sar gent Shriver, his brother-in-law. He agreed thai young men could defer their military service if they joined the Peace Corps, which didn't please voters whose sons al ready were undergoing basic training. Loud Explosion The explosion was loud. Rep. John J. Rhodes (R-Ariz.), called it a "made to order opportunity for Communist in filtrators." A diplomat from an African nation warned the Peace Corps members that "in my country an invitation to take a young lady to dinner constitutes a proposal of mar riage." Doubt was expressed that any college graduate, ca pable of getting a job paying at least S300 a month, would sign up for S75 a month and subsistence. Rep. H. R. Gross (R-Iowa), said the Peace Corps was "a haven for draft dodg ers. Fear was expressed that there would be a rush of beat niks, carrying bags of mari juana and volumes of erotic poetry, into the Peace Corps. Goldwater was against it at the start. Sen. Bourke B.Hlck enlooper (R-Iowa), said it was a "pig in the poke." The Peace Corps has had Bethel Assembly To Hear Guests "The Former and Latter Rain" will be the title of the message Sunday at Bethel As sembly of God's 11 a.m. serv ice. At the 7:30 p.m. evan gelistic service the title of the message will be, "A De mon's Question." The pastor, the Rev. L. D. Krause, will speak at both services. Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. the Rev. David R. Bush, mission ary from Kyushu and Ryukyu Islands, will be the guest speaker. The church address is 122S East McAndrews rd. Minister's Subject Given for Roundtable Someone once told me that the Book of Esther does not even mention the name of God once. If this is so, why is Esther in the Bible? How were the books for the Bible selected? This lengthy question will j be discussed this week end on the Minister's Roundtable. according to the Rev. Law rence D. Krause, Bethel As sembly of God church, who will be moderator for the program. Panel members will be Dr. Tom McNeil. First Presby i'edt rj?S ' 1 rcckl terian church; the Rev. Robert byi r, nd 'th their long. Cull. First Assembly of God, I pointed wings fanning the nd the Rev. Wendell Wagler, ' warming air. they arrive at First Christian church. j the grassy meadow. Again the The program will be tele-j sweet, rippling song of "bobo vised for KMEDTV viewing -link" fills the air. Pretty and Saturday at 9:35 a m. Sunday 'gay enough Is the song to Jus at 8:05 a m. it will be broad-jtlfy the expression, "the bobo cast on radii) station K.MED. I link, gladdest biiA there it." MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD, OREGON its troubles and a couple of times brushed close to disas ter. But earlier this year when Shriver appeared before the House Foreign Affairs Committee and asked for leg islation to double the size of the corps and spend $63 mil lion during the coming fiscal year he got a unanimous vote of approval. Two Year Hitch The basic idea of the Peace Corps is that Americans will go into undeveloped nations and help in any way they can. Anybody over 18 years of age is eligible, and a 70-year-old man recently was cleared as an expert on heavy machin ery. The term of service is two years. The salary is $75 a month, banked in the Unit ed States and held until the corpsman is discharged. The living allowance varies. An American teaching school in Ghana gets whatever the na tive school teacher earns. Housing is free, but it has to be the same housing available to natives. Applicants must pass a writ- -rS Small Worlds Arcund Us V By LaWMn: Watkin w. ins (Kit liter it Tribune Syndicate, 196:) Bobolink Changes Name For Hit Southern Trek It must be very confusing to have your name change with the seasons or to vary every place you visit. But that is glaringly evi dent with a common bird who sings so beautifully in grassy meadows during the summer, then switches its diet and Hs name as it undertakes its long migration to South America for the winter. Change of name and shift of geographical location means also a drastic change in dress, from brightness and beauty while its glad song fills the meadow with melody, to a dull and undistinguished brown. The little black, white and yellow singer, perched on a swaying weed stem, is known a bobolink or perhaps "boboLincoln" for to some that is what the song sounds like. There, in the grassy mead ow, it raises its family. The little brown female sits pa tiently, knowing full well her colorful mate, whose rollick ing song is rippling across the meadow, will give her ample warning of impending danger. When he sounds the alarm note she slips quietly off the nest, long before the threat ened danger is near. Mai Only During the summer, while the nesting season is in full swing, the human visitor to the grasslands sees only the male bobolink, and because he is so neatly dressed in black, with a white stripe, he is called a "skunk-bird," or "skunk -blackbird." Actually, he dees belong to the black bird family. At the end of the summer season and after family rais ing, the bobolinks gather in huge flocks. The males put on their drab traveling suits and they all leave the now not-so-grassy meadow to be gin the southern migration. They leave behind the name bobolink and enter the rice fields of the South where they are known as "rice birds." They stuff themselves with the grain, moving by easy stages southward, and at the same time growing fat. By now observers, noting their plumpness, call them "butter-ball-birds." Now, too, because they gath er at night in the reeds and grasses along creeks, they be come known as "reedbirds." Fortified with food they wing their way toward the south ern hemisphere, still in large flocks. For thf few months that winter holds the North in its grip, the bobolinks while away the warmer southern days. Head North When it's springtime in the North, the bobolinks start back. The male will precede the females by several days, situation and perhaps select the summer home. They will be there waiting when the girls arrive from the South. And because they usually show up In May they will be called "Maybirds." The newly-arriving females know verv well where the I ten examination. Sample que 1 lions: "Which of the following is most commonly used in the United States for feeding swine: (a) clover, (B) wheat (C) alfalfa (D) corn (E) lespe deza?" "The chief danger from be ing cut or scratched is that one may contract (A) tetanus (B) trachoma (C) hydrophobia ID) meningitis (E) encephali tis?" Undergo Training . Successful applicants go through a training period in the United States and a brief er one in the nation to which they are assigned. The corps has 917 persons on duty in foreign countries and 190 in training. There are 2,542 in training in the United States. In the total of 3,649, there are 1.383 women. It costs $9,000 a year to sustain a member of the Peace Corps. Eighteen per cent of the per sons who go into training are washed out for lack of skill or personality defects. The Peace Corps never goes into a country until it Is In vited. The fear that the low wage would discourage col lege graduates turned out to be groundless. There have been a total of 28,836 appli cants. Twenty nations which do not now have Peace Corps members have applications on file. Sixteen members of the Peace Corps have been fired or resigned after arriving in foreign nations. One man got off a plane in South America, took one look and caught the next plane home. Then there was the day when Miss Mar gery Michelmore wrote a postcard to a friend and care lessly dropped it on a street in Nigeria. She was a school teacher, a graduate of Smith College and a resident of Fox boro, Mass. In the postcard she told a friend in the United States about the "squalor and absolutely primitive condi tions" in Nigeria where peo ple cooked in the streets, bathed In the streets and went to the toilet in the streets. Circulate Card Nigerian students picked up the card, reproduced it and circulated it. A protest dem onstration was held, and for a while it appeared that Miss Michelmore had sunk the Peace Corps single handed. She apologized to the Nigeri ans, got on a plane and came home and waited to see whether she would be fired. The Peace Corps stood by her and she was employed in its Washington headquarters un til she resigned about three $ Don't Give In To Summer enpsy i mn ms& spss P psa tn U s?"5a IjkS 2 :f!i Isn M la fcOi X Hi 9i APPLIANCE MART 77J BIG Y APPIIANCI CENTER 773 FCLDMAN 1 OLSON 773 HOME APPLIANCE COMPANY 77 J JOHNSTON STORES 773 LEONARD ELECTRIC COMPANY 773 MODERN PLUMBING 773 MONTGOMERY WAR i CO 773 I PAULSEN GATES THRIFT MARKET 644 ; TROWBRIDGE ELECTRIC " j WESTERN AUTO 772 SEARS ROEBUCK lit I.1-. . t months ago to be married. Mrs. Janie Fletcher, a 65-year-old retired school teach er from Texas, prcbably will be mentioned the next time the Peace Corps asks Con gress for some money. She was flunked out of a training course in Puerto Rico ostensi bly because she could not mas ter Portuguese in preparation for assignment in Brazil. Mrs. Fletcher told a different story to Sen. John Tower (R-Tcx.), who in turn told it to the world. Denies Charges He said Mrs. Fletcher was asked to run a mile before "awajfai fcaataKM At JGSWTQft STORES STILL AT 112 SOUTH RIVERSIDE Heat And Humidity This summer "beat the heat" in the comfort of your own living room by installing a modern, efficient air-conditioning unit! As your air-conditioner provides a regulated flow of cool, de humidified air throughout your home, discomforts of summer nights and days vanish. Doors and windows remain closed against torrid summer temperatures outside. AIR CONDITION! Sec your favorite CalOre League Dealer today ... let him provide expert advice on the model and cooling capacity of the unit which will insure the proper summer living atmosphere for your home. breakfast, do pushups in the morning and learn to swim with her clothing on and her feet tied. The Peace Corps de nied it. Then Mrs. Fletcher said she was "cursed and yell ed at" by younger persons in training who stayed up most of the night and drank whis key and rum. The Peace Corps denied that, too, but it seems unlikely that they have heard the last of Mrs. Fletcher. A man from Ohio with a criminal record almost got into the Peace Corps. A beat nik who got as far as training school in the United States reverted to type one night and began jeering at such American institutions as luncheon clubs and service organizations and had to be fired. Such things cast occasional blankets of gloom over Peace Corps headquarters, but there a BIG REDUCTION in PRICES- fall U I I I Ha - 41J1 Hotpoint - 3032 W.itinghouie - 7731 Fedderi - 3395 General llettrle - 361V RCA-Whlrlpool - 4541 Frlgldelre-Amant - 5348 Carrier - 7301 Watdl Tru ColJ - 1J5 Amani - ""' We.tl9"iw - 4217 Wi.ard - Kenmore in i ' i FRIDAY, JULY 27, 19S2 is always one consolation. They have been denounced by the Russians as "imperial- "MORE ECONOMY" O Day or Night Service 1,7 1 I I I II T It Ill II Cemetery, Mortuary, Mausoleum, Cremations mMG MO Before we move to (he Shopping Center Where we will open with all 1963 modelsl Choose a Size & Save On RCA WHIRLPOOL FREEZERS i-aTifih'199" Model EJV13S Holds 437 lbs. Model 215 Holds 718 lbs. Signal light Built-in Defrost Drain, Million Magnet Door With lock RCA WHIRLPOOL QUALITY THROUGHOUT $10 Down Delivers Your Cholcel A d) ws" wii 1 m. ... j . . ej -itajwuiJ. l ill -A 9 ist agents." When you're seek ing money from Congress, that's good. eintmiianktttr Memorial Park & Funeral Home "A Name To Trust" 773-7338 219 $2999S OPEN TONIGHT Soon to be at Medford Shopping Center I I II J IP y M I Kf I