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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 6, 1963)
8 A WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY I. 1863 MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON Social Events Women's News Musicians Honored at Reception William Warfield, noted bass-baritone, and his accom panist, Willard Straight, were honored at a reception given Monday night at the borne of Dr. and Mrs. Fred Lorish 830 Minnesota avenue. The event followed a concert which the two had presented at Medford High school for Jackson County Civic Music association members. About 70 guests attended Pouring were Miss Mary Lorish, the couple's daughter, and Miss Kako Kondo, Japa nese student at Southern Ore gon college who is making her home with the Lorish family this year. The refreshment table was centered with an arrangement of yellow daffodils and acacia Mrs. Oscar Heyerman and Mrs. Gordon Hudson assisted Mrs. Lorish. Among those attending the event was Kenji Kondo, brother of Miss Kondo, who is a guest in the Lorish home for a month. Mr. Kondo was recently graduated from Northland college, Ashland Wise, and is en route to his home in Kobe. He wlH be accompanied by Dr. and Mrs, Lorlsh's son, Fred, sophomore at Standford university, Palo Alto, Calif., who has been granted a scholarship to study et Kclo university in Tokyo. Another member of the Kondo family, Don, lived a year with the Lorishes while he atended Medford High school as an American Field service student. To Meet The Wenonah club of Wea tonka council, Degree of Poca hontas, will meet Thursday, February 7 at 10 a.m., In the Redman hall on Apple street. An all-day workshop will be conducted and a covered dish luncheon will be served at noon. A business meeting is set for 1:30 p.m. Girl Scouts Among the women who will be singing for the annual concert of the Apostolic church Friday, February 8, will be (left to right) Mrs, Clifford Iverson, Mrs. Nolan Roby and Mrs. Btisla Burchfield. The concert, under the direction of William E. Walden. will be gin et 8 p.m. The church orchestra, a mixed chorus and soloists will perform. WORK SMARTER NOT HARDER By BERNICE STRAWN Oregon Stat University Troop 139 We have three patrols In our troop. Leader of the Busy Scouts is Beth Bailey and members are Brenda Hartley, Kathy Helken, Michelle Wal dron, Julie Clarke and Cindy Heldemnnn. John Boehnkt Is patrol Jeader of the White Swans and members are Jan na Vincent, Carolyn Berry, Lorl Richards, Patty Rlcken and Kaye Maclolek. Leader of the Blue Pearls is Beth White and members of this patrol ore Sandra Boulware, Chris tine Drysdale, Karen Lang ston, Robin Murray and Mar jorie Sohnery. Lori Richards was elected troop scribe, Brenda Hartley is treasurer, and Kaye Maclo lek is reporter. For Christmas gifts, Mrs. Dale Edwards helped us make ceramic frogs and turtles. The Busv Scout patrol baked and served decorated cookies, the White Swans acted out "The Nicht Before Christinas," and the Blue Pearls made decora tions for our Christmas party. Several of our troop members also went to a Brownie Christ mas party at the Girl Scout building. On Jan. 9 we had an in vestiture ceremony for a new member, Kaye Maclolek. Mrs, Vincent told the Brownie sto ry and Kaye was given her Brownie pin. The others were given their oue-yciu stars Other new members of our troop this year are Julie Clarke. Cynthia Hukiemahii and Marjoyic Sohnery. We went to a Brownie skat Ing parly Jan. 10. Adults as slsllng were John Drysdale, Steve Richards and Mrs. Vin cent. We arc making valentine inuls for the trays at Kogue Valley hospital and will tour the hospital on Feb. 13. Troop Jnattf'r tc Mm R, C, Vincent, and assistants are J.Irs. H. L. Boehnke and Mrs. William L. While. Are you still the gal your husband married - full of vim for all that's fun? Or does homemaking leave you "bush ed" with most of the old "you" gone? Americans, including wo men, are woefully lacking in physical stamina, we're told, That's why our government has Instigated a tremendous drive for physical fitness. We asked Jessalee Malla- lieu, OSU recreation special ist, for a few ideals on getting back some of that old pep. She says that for one thing, we don't exercise enough to keep fit. Did you know that it you sit slumped over it actually affects your outlook? Everything seems to tower ov er you. It's depressing! When you sit and sland erect you feel more on top of the world, Choose recreation to help keep you and the family in good shape. She suggests hik ing, bowling, bicycling, boat ing (If you do some of the owing), and folk dancing. Working wives - exercise while at your desk. Place the waste basket so you'll have to twist your body to reach It. This is good for your midriff. How about walking to work? Or park the car for enough away to give you a little exercise. Young mothers - don't car ry the baby or your grocery sack on one hip. This throws your body out of balance. Housework is a good tonerup per too, if you stand tall, sit tall and do a bit of the twist when you dust. Ho tn clean steam Irons? That question comes to us. The best cleaning Job you can get Is by an authorized serv ice man, but it may be ex pensive. Get an estimate first. Do-it-yourself cleaning is best done three or four times a year before rlnpglng be comes too serious. Fill the Iron with clear white vinegar and steam for two minutes. Let stand overniRlit, then rinse several times. Expect an un pleasant odor the next time you use the iron, but it will disappear eventually. Special iron cleaners for home use are hIso available at hardware stores. Water spots on furniture are often a problem after holiday company and winter parties. Try applying a warm iron ov er a damp blotter off and on for a few seconds at a time. The heat and moisture will help remove the stain. If this doesn't work, rub lightly with 40 steel wool and a liquid wax. Smart homemakers tell us: If your housekeeping isn't up to snuff today, try giving dad and the youngsters a warm welcome so they'll no tice you and not the clutter. A cheerful mother is more necessary than a spotless house. PTA Founding To Be Marked Founder's Day will be eel ebrated at the monthly meet ing of Roosevelt school Par ent-Teacher association Fri day, February 8, at 2:30 p.m. Past presidents of the Roosevelt unit will be hon ored, and a collection of pic tures of former students will be on display. A special Invi tation is extended to all Roosevelt school alumni to attend the meeting. Entertainment will be fur nished by the school orches tra, directed by Miss Alice Saunders of the faculty. Re freshments will be served by mothers of children in the fourth grade. Child care will be available. Contralto To Be Guest Mrs. W. Arthur Hiatt, con tralto, will be guest artist for the Apostolic Faith church winter concert to be given Friday, February 8 at 8 p.m., in the church auditorium, Third street and Central ave nue. Mrs. Hiatt is from the Apostolic Faith headquarters church, Portland. William E. Walden is the director. Music by Mozart, O'Hara, Mendelssohn, W heelwright, Tschaikowsky, Sousa, Fisher, Winstead, Sibelius, Howe and spirituals will be on the program. Orchestra, mixed chorus, piano and baritone solos will be on the program. Layette Shower Given in Prospect Prospect - A layette shower was given recently at the home of Mrs. Archie McKillop in honor of Mrs. Robert Lar sen. Mrs. Gene Arias was co-hostess. Twenty - four guests from Union Creek, Shady Cove and Prospect attended. Games were followed , by refresh ments. . Installation Conducted Miss Barbara Beer was in stalled president of Omicron chapter, Theta Rho Girls, at ceremonies held January 28 in the IOOF hall. She was presented a white gavel, the symbol of her authority. Miss Suzanne White was installed vice-president, Miss Cheryl Walker, secretary, and Miss Jane Miller, treasurer. Other officers for the com ing term are the Misses Suz anne Massong, marshal; Holly Hove, warden; Melody Swag erty, conductor; Kathalee Ap pelate, right support to the president; Brenda Sparling, chaplain; Dianne Vinzant, mu sician; and Joette Bowden, right support to the vice-president. Guardians are the Misses Annice Black and Vicki Breen. Mrs. Homer Vinzant and Mrs. Eikon Walker will serve as advisers for the Medford club. The retiring president. Miss Dianna Vinzant, was present ed a junior past president's tiara and regalia. Miss Kathalee Appelgate was installing officer. Mrs. Homer Vinzant was installing marshal, and Mrs. Riley Ap pelgate, chaplain. Following installation, a skit was performed by Mrs. Henry Guss, Mrs. Lee Garrett and Mrs. Vinzant of Olive Rebekah lodge. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Dale Eldred assisted by Miss Jane Miller and Miss Vicki Breen. College Women To Hold Benefit Miss Judy Bash and Miss Nyla Murray, Medford stu dents at Oregon State univer sity, will assist in serving a "Kountry Kitchen" saver ot tering breakfast Sunday, Feb ruary 10 in tne Delta JJeita Delta chapter house, 340 North Twenty-Sixth street, Corvallis. Hours are from 8:30 to 11 a.m. Miss Bash is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Bash, 1325 Bundy avenue, and Miss Murray is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Murray, 3734 Crater Lake avenue. An invitation is extended to all alumnae, parents and friends. Funds received from the breakfast will be contributed to the chapter's scholarship program. Scholarships will be awarded In tne spring term 10 two deserving women on campus. Wide, High Shoulders Pose Fashion Question f ..... :,,.. niorrf t months, parti By ALINE MOSBY United Press International Paris - (BPII - Paris design ers have launched wider, high er shoulders and sleeves, but today s ques tion is - will women wear them? The parade of spring fash ions has end ed with Yves , St. Laurent, 26, the young I est and most Anne designers, and Cristobal Balenciaga, 68, con sidered one of the best, both displaying a wider shoulder. During spring fashion week, shoulders a n d o r sleeves ranged from the puffed sleeve of Marc Bohan at Christian S- It Buckles-Bows To Hold Party Ashland-Buckles and Bows Square Dance club will hold a St. Valentine's dance Satur day, February 9, at 8:30 p.m. at the Country Squares, Col ver road, Talent. The couple traveling the longest distance to attend the party will be named king and queen of the evening. Floyd Workman will call the squares and all dancers and callers are Invited. Refreshments will be pot luck style. Canadian Ballet Dancer Is Guest Miss Donna Miller, Mon treal, Quebec, Canada, was an overnight guest Monday, February 4 at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Reed, 2743 Orchard Home drive. Miss Miller is the youngest member of the Royal Winni peg Ballet company and was enroute with the group from Seattle, Wash., to Oakland, Calif. The Reeds, newcomers to the valley from Detroit, Mich., had met Miss Miller and her family in Bar Harbor, Maine. Mr. and Mrs. Reed are re tired from the Detroit Board of Education and chose Med ford in which to live after traveling through here on dif ferent occasions while vacationing. Returns Mrs. Edgar Sitton has re turned to her home at 324 Vancouver avenue after an extended visit in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hoskins, Downey, Calif. She also spent some time with friends in Po mona, Pasadena and La Puente. Dior to the padded shoulder and bell-shaped sleeve of Jac ques Heim. Store buyers from various countries were reported to have bought dresses with the new shoulders. But whether they will be modified back home or reproduced as is for department stores could not be determined. Last winter several design ers dropped skirt lengths. But women apparently still want to show their legs, so skirt hems were raised again this spring. In addition to expanded shoulders, the other main trend in the spring collections was the suit that did not look like a suit. Balenciaga. Pierre Ralmain and Jacques Griffe made elegant suits as of yore with collars, jackets to the hip and gentle fitting. But St. Laurent, Guy La Roche and J. F. Carhay at the House of Nina Riccl offered suit jackets as casual as men's shirts and peasant blouses. Jean Dresses eleminated col lars and lapels and had suit jackets buttoning onto blouses with a wide expanse of blouse between the buttons. Bohan used "wide open" low-cut suit necklines that showed a "dicky" or crisp blouse front. Some buyers predict the non-suit suite will show up in budget stores within three months, particularly in the United States where many women like a casual, sportly look. Give the gift you would like to SZZSf reetivo 1 M w5 .,31 wAtxi niivu 5 Vf VMii ivvin CHOCOLATES frm AVAN'S In the Medford Shopping Center rvTTl7Til;t4il 3 ATTENTION GREEN THUMBERS! Rose Bushes -Flowering Shrubs Fruit Trees-Berry Plants, etc. NOW IN STOCK! The Monarch has . . . PATENTED ROSE BUSHES from the 2 Most Reliable Rose Growers in America JACKSON & PERKINS PETERSON & DERING We Now Have "TROPICANA" The Rose of the century! Tropicana will be scarce. Get yours NOW while they are still available! Also in stock is a fine selection of the newer varieties to choose from. STERLING SILVER KING'S RANSOM JOHN S. ARMSTRONG MEMORIAM WHITE PRINCE And Many Others Climbers, Too. n Get that DORMANT CLEAN-UP SPRAY On Right Away! Get MILLER'S DORMANT Twin Pack for This Jobl When you buy flower and vegetable seed, get it from us. Save 5s to 15c each packet. Park & Shop at Our Downtpwn Store f.l 2 STORES 6th & Bartlett 10th & So. Fir n Delegates Are Named by Club Shady Cove - Delegates to a coming district meeting were elected at a recent meet ing of the auxiliary to Steel head post, Veterans of For eign Wars, Shady Cove. Tne district meeting will I be held in Rogue River March inV' preceded by a " politick I dinner. Mrs. Vera Wobler, Ashland, will preside for the auxiliary, and George Con noli. Rogue River, for the pest. Delegates elected to repre sent the Shady Cove auxiliary are Mrs. Tom Merit, Mrs. Fred Mast, Mrs. Dale Sawyer and Mrs. Robert Harmon. Other district officers that arc members nf he fihnriy Cove auxiliary are Mrs. Agnes llub brll, treasurer. Mrs. Kenneth Clair, guard; Mrs. Joble Bry an, fl..K U-urur, and Mrs. Philip Holt, color bearer. Troop 128 Kako Kondo, a Japanese girl who Is a student at Med ford high school, visited our troop. When she came she gave us addresses of Japanese eirls in Girl Scout troop In Japan. That will help u ram our Ten Tal badge. She tuid lis about Girl Scouting in Japan. We are working on our Hospitality badge and plan to begin our Bird badge. The February 3 meeting we will meet with Mrs. Howard Bush who is going to show us slides of bird pictures and teach us how to make bird feeders. Members of Troop 128 are i Susan Gannon. Kathy Hall, Diane Hatcher, Diane Hew lett, Kathy Hiatt, Jan Morris, Cheryl Nelson, Barbara while, Norma Yandell and i Marilyn Young. Mrs. George Gannon Is the leader, and Mrs William White assists. Susan Gannon, IReporter Annual Winter Concert APOSTOLIC FAITH CHURCH Orchestra of 45 Pieces Mixed Chorus of 65 Voices William E. Walden, Director of Music Contralto Soloist Sylvia Hiatt Group of Negro Spirituals, Piano Quartet Mary Friesen Judy Tyson Bernice Jamei Linda Carver "Marche Slav" FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8 - 8:00 P.M. APOSTOLIC FAITH 1 CHURCH oycaarvorpMtor 3rd and Central, Medford February MISS OREGON Feature 1 J1. 18 v rAv ftVvi' is -Av-, Vis,?, TT V Til. 1 - - " v r.v t. worn 4 DAYS ONLY Save $4" to $5" 100 NYLON JERSEYS 4" iy-'.' 'V ., ,' "Tg-aeU'Vii -eVBtr -s-v s. . .-iLiwfc, JMrif st' ft t pSKi. Vs Vir 5 t?tI 3 r Ml KM v.. Famous Maker 099 .1199 X. i 1 usually 14.98 Save 4.99 H usual'y 17.95 Sava S.99 w LaPointe's first time ever sale of these famous maker dresses! All easy care 100 Nylon & no iron. Sizes 10 to 20, 12'2to 22!2, 4 days to save. JACKET DRESSES 11 ss Sava S.99 Short or long Sleeves 9 99 Seve 4.99