MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON
1 " " -
1 " ' A 'jrs 1 i -
SUNDAY. JUNE II. It 13
Pictured during the rectnt invitational
tournament sponsored by the Women's Golf
association of Rogua Valley Country club
art (left to light) Mn. Roy Blinker, Del
Norte Golf club. Crescent City, Calif.! Mn.
Earl Cannam Jr., Baywood Golf and Coun
try club. Eureka, Calif.: Mn. Milan Lucich,
Baytide Golf club. Eureka, Calif.; Mn.
Dick Cary, Reamei Golf and Country club,
Klamath Falli, and Mrs. William Cowning,
president of the association.
Potluck Dinner
Ends Activities
A potluck dinner held at
home of Mrs. Herbert
Eeitz, 2502 Walden place,
June 12, concluded the busi
ness year of the Medford
Lions auxiliary.
J Following a brief business
meeting and reports of the
tommittee chairmen, Mrs.
aohn Henson, president, pre
sented her officers with gifts.
Mrs. Edward Ashton, immedi
ate past president, presented
Mrs. Henson with a coin glass
bowl in behalf of the group.
In a candlelight ceremony
conducted by past presidents,
Mrs. Joseph Tomjack and
Mrs. Alan Jewett, two new
members, Mrs. John Hatfield
and Mrs. Robert Stokes, were
initiated into the club. ;
RNA Lodge, Club
Picnic Planned
Royal Neighbors of Ameri
ca lodge and Mistletoe club
members and families plan a
joint picnic at Hawthorne
park Thursday, June 20 at 6
p.m., unless the weather is in
clement. Juvenile lodge mem
bers will be honored.
Those who attend should
take picnic lunches.
Navy Mother?
An all -day meeting has
been announced for the Med
ford Navy Mothers club Tues
day, June 18 in the home of
Mrs. James Wicker, 809
Adams lane, Medford. Moth
ers of Navy, Marine Corps or
Coast Guard personnel are
invited.
Humorous Initiation
Conducted by Lodge
Yreka A humorous mock
initiation highlighted the last
meeting of the Pythian Sis
ters. Kenneth Bley was the
candidate initiated into the
mysteries of the order. Dur
ing the business session, pre
sided over by most excellent
chief, Mrs. Ernest Johnson,
the charter was draped in
of Mrs. Clara Hen
derson, who held the office of
excellent junior.
The June 26th meeting will
be held outdoors. The theme
will be a "Trip to Reno."
Refreshments were served
in the banquet room around
tables decorated with bou
quets of red roses in white
containers. The committee
was composed of Mrs. Chester
Barnett, Mrs. Emma Ahlgren,
and Mrs. Althea Smith.
Today
6:30 p.m. - Sam's Valley
Ladies club, annual dinner,
Sam's Valley school cafeteria.
Monday
12:30 p.m. - Reames Past
Matrons club, Mrs. Vernon
Turpin, 3027 Old Military rd
12:30 p.m. - Zuleima tem
ple. Daughters of Nile, Mw-d-ford
hotel.
1 p.m. - Crater chapter.
Grandmother clubs of Amer
ica, Mrs. Roy Kelly. 239
Cheery st.. Central point.
6:30 p.m. - Past presidents
of Degree of Honor Protective
association. Town House res
taurant. 6:30 p.m. - Men of Unity,
Unity church, Holly and Ha
ven sts.
7:30 p.m. - Ruth Esther
unit, Wesleyan Service guild,
First Methodist church.
Tuesday
9 a.m. - Rogue Valley Herb
society, meet at Big-Y to
travel to home of Mrs. Steph
en F. Counts, 619 Janes Creek
rd.. Grants Pass.
9:30 a.m. - WSCS, Circle 1.
Mrs. Haakon Boe, 220 North
Oakdale ave.; Circle 2, Mrs.
Eugene Ray, 2444 Ross lane;
Circle 3, Mrs. Gerald Sher
man, 2802 LaPine St.; Circle
4, Mrs. Walter Higgins, 2200
Oakwood dr.; Circle 5. Mrs.
Eldon Johnson, 481 Lozier
lane.
1 p.m. - Red Cross Com
munity club. Red Cross cen
ter, Hawthorne ave.
I i
We're
Moving
Yes, it's true. Wa ara
leaving our present lo
cation and will soon re
open in our new shop
n the CASCADE SHOP
PING CENTER, in White
City. To celebrate this
progressive step we of
fer you savings not only
for now but, for tha
coming yearl
T -7'Wil f
far v irtZ'i9
REMOVAL SALE!
One Week Only-June 17 Thru June 23
4th of JULY
SPECIALS fetf
BATHING SUITS
Now $8
Values
To $16.98
Doreen and Clara's
SPECIALS
Spring and Summer
DRESSES
515, 820 and 1214 2614
Values lo 23.95 $5.00
Values to 45.00... $10.00
Valentine
Specials
CAPRI SETS
Value to $14.95
NOW ONLY
5
00
PEAR FESTIVAL
SPECIALS
Bags, Hats, Jewelery
12 PRICE
CHRISTMAS
SPECIALS
Sweaters
and Blouses
DRASTICALLY
REDUCED FOR GIFT GIVING!
MOTHER'S DAY
SPECIALS
Vili ONC Or A Mnu
f!fl e I-
salesmen aampm
DRESSES
Sii.i 12 - 12Vi 14'.
AT COST!
Thanksgiving Specials
SURPRISE
RACKS and TABLES
FOR YOU jfffl
to Express Our Thanks
for Your Continu
Patronage
Values
lo $26.95
EASTER
SPECIALS
SUMMER
SUITS
NowW0
1 p.m. - WSCS. Circle 8.
Mrs. Harry Meyers, 20 North
Berkeley way; Circle 7, First
Methodist church; Circle 9,
Mrs. Floyd Lewis, 710 Sher
man St.; Circle 10, Mrs. Ches
ter James, 307 Willamette
ave.
1:30 p.m. - WSCS, Circle 8,
Mrs. Richard Jewett. 903
Winchester St.
6:30 p.m. - Royal Arch
Widows, Jacksonville Masonic
temple.
8 p.m. - Pythian Sisters,
Pythian bldg.
Wednesday
11 a.m. - Security Benefit
club, Pythian bldg.
12:30 p m. - DUV, Mrs. Bes
sie E. Young, 425 North Holly
st.
6:30 p.m. - Phoenix Grange
HEC, Mr. and Mrs. C. L.
Hockersmith. 3860 Calhoun
rd.
Thursday
1:30 P.m. - Jacksonville
Garden club, Mrs. A. G. Mot-
schenbacher, 1729 Old Stage
rd.
6 p.m. - RNA lodge. Mistle
toe club, Hawthorne park.
6:30 p.m. - Nevita Past Ma
trons and Past Patrons dinner,
Masonic temple, Central
Point.
8 p.m. - Adarcl chapter,
OES, Jackson v 1 1 1 e Masonic
temple.
Saturday
12 noon - Crater Lake chap
ter, DAR, TouVelle park.
MANOR-ISMS .
By ETHEIYN IVANS
Vmi-Vidi
By MARGARET SCHULER
Roma - Almost everyday,
at the little kiosk at the cor
ner, I find a new book about
Rome; impressions and de
scriptions by some person or
other, each with a different
angle, viewpoint and ap
proach. Summing them all up
they add to the fact that Rome
is. tops.
Many Chamberlain wrote
the one I wish I had thought
about writing, and had been
as clever as she is, to do it
in the same way.
Many Chamberlain is an
American from Indiana who
came to stay in Rome for
three months, and has been
here ever since - three years,
She knew all roads lead to
Dnmc. so. that eliminated her
hnorriinff the wrong train. &ne
knew that to endear herself
to the Romans, socially, she
simply had to do as tne no.
mans do. . 1
she had a list of "great eat
ing places," given her by well
heeled friends, and a list of
wonderful little restaurants
given her by tightwaa, low
budget friends. She had stored
away in a cellar corner of her
mind several Latin declensions
and the first line of Julius
Caesar to keep her in touch
with the language.
Faithful to custom, sne
watched the sunset on ner
first day from the Villa Bor-
ohese on the Pincla. li iook
Rome exactly 24 hours to re
duce her to a state of convic
tion that any thing seemca
possible.
"Dear rrienas pna
Romans," to those who know
Rome, is alive and poignantly
real. She writes what all of
us see, but cannot quite ex
press, with understanaing aim
love, and sympathy and hu
mor. . ..u
shp avs. for example, me
air splits with racket of racing
engines, unmuffled exhausts,
outlawed horns, whining rub
ber, the cries of venders of
i.,u mnn ann nrooms: "c
pavement groans and trembles
beneath tne traces ui
r.i.aterl trams, of autobuses
an1 nnfnmnbiles."
oh -- ... . ;
a. u,b unocxea to un
cover that Rome is lull of
tiiians. The Rome she had
had in mind was a solemn mu
seum, maintained by Just
enough native personnel to
keep it functioning for the
.,.rit trade. To her delight
and amazement the Rome that
is, is a perpetual lcsuvai m
melodrama ana comcu j,
against the magic background
created by ancestral saints
and sinners.
About the home, "Home to
the Italian is roughly what
the lair la to the lion. It is a
place to sleep, and to take
refuge from the rain; It is
where the dresses are washed,
the shoes get shlned and the
suits pressed. Home is a place
to go out from, on one dozen
pretexts, three dozen times a
day, weather permitting, and
Rome weather is gentle."
On time, she says, "visitors
to Rome monotonously ob
serve that Italians have no
sense of time,, and It la true
that they do not feel It tick
ing away at them, and atirring
up a mess in the cauldrons of
guilt. But to deduce from that,
that Italians do not value time
is the greatest error.' There is
a 'time' honored saying which
translated means 'Who works,
loses precious time!" It hangs
on many a wall of Roman
houses as a reminder."
From the intricacies of pay
ing the light and telephone
bill, the problems of buying
in Rome, of bargaining, of
holiday times, to incidents
which happen - all is as
though it is a diary of every
one who comes to Rome to
live. And I might
Mary Chamberlain
and pretty.
Tudor guild served its an
nual dinner or the 1963
Oregon Shakespearean Festi
val season in Ashland to more
than 200. Producer Angus
Bowmcr and Mrs. Bowmer
and General Manager William
Patton and Mrs. Patton joined
association members, direc
tors, staff, technicians, and all
the company of young actors.
This is always the first get
acquainted, social affair of
each season. The dinner is also
by way of being congratula
tory for those who received
the acting parts they had
sought and consolation for
those who were disappointed
Mrs. Richard Gray, general
dinner chairman, Mrs. Elliott
MacCracken, president of the
guild, Robertson Collins, son
of Rogue Manor's Earl Col
lins, and Angus Bowmer, him
self, offered cordial and inter
esting greetings. However, the
outstanding and absolutely in
credible feature of the pro
gram was Mrs. Bowmer-sans
notes or lists or help of any
kind - introducing the entire
staff and company, recogniz
ing each and remembering the
correct names, where he or
she was from, and the proper
college affiliation. She had
met most of them about one
week before the dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gray,
Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Windt, Mr,
and Mrs. Hugh Simpson, Mr,
and Mrs. R. M. Evans and Mrs
C. Rcase Braley served on the
welcoming committee. Stage
Manager Fred Chapman and
family and Miss Cecil Berry
from Vancouver, B.C., were at
our table. Miss Berry was jub
ilant as she had been cast in
two coveted parts.
Mrs. Braley flew back from
the East just in time for the
dinner. She had spent three
weeks visiting a brother In
Washington, D.C., another
brother in New York City,
and had attended her class re
union at Smith College, North
ampton, Mass. Mrs. Charles
Davis was another Manor
guild member who attended
and helped with the dinner.
A full bus load of our mem- i
bers has returned from a I
thoroughly enjoyable two-day j
trip to the Oregon coast, stop-1
ping overnight in Coos Bay. I
The weather was somewhat
cooperative, they report, and
they saw many, many beauti
ful flowers, as well as the
broad Pacific, which was the
principal object of the trip.
A full-fledged exodus is in
process on this Hill. At our
side door each morning there
is a small traffic jam of cars
loading up for the take-off,
while from the front entrance
members whiz off in taxicabs
for the bus stations and the
airport.
Mr. and Mrs. O. M. Ander
son, having taken a motor
trip over the new Rogers high
way in Canada, have Infected
about halt of the members
with their enthusiasm. Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Coates, the Ray
Ncptuncs and Mrs. Charles
Davis, who Is sharing her
Thunderbird with Miss Irma
Barnes, Dr. Edith Robb and
Mrs. F. M. Murdock, are leav
ing this week for the selfsame
trip. Mrs. Graham Foote is
planning to take Mrs. Braley,
Mrs. W. W. Howard and Miss
Hazel Calblck in her car at a
future date, and my husband
has also succumbed and Insists
upon starting out almost Im
mediately. I, of course, gladly
go along tor the "buggy ride."
After all, it is now vacation
time (or almost everyone; and
for a long time this column
will have to be on an irregular
Sunday schedule. 1 plan to
take along a few notes and my
trusty, rusty, old Betsey (type
writer) and something excit
ing could come up en route,
you know. Whenever I can
mail a column back and Ye
Editor of the Women's Section
of the M. T. can manage to
wedge it in, I do hope you
tind it. Bye now!
Pcnfc en Wodntsday
Phoenix The annual
Phoenix Grange Home Econ
omic club picnic will be held
Wednesday, June 19, at 6:30
p.m. at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. C. L. Hockersmith, 3860
Calhoun road.
Mrs. Harry J3t Jarnett and
Mrs. L. C. Thomas will be co
hostesses. Table service will be re
quired; coffee will be furnished.
11
Sir it
mil
OK
I S
IS vl
DRAPERY
CLEANING
We'll Take Down Your Drapes
Glsan Thtai Bststifnlly
Finish them with a decorator pleat
fold . . and than rehang them in
your homel
NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR REMOVING
OR REHANOINO YOUR DRAPES.
Have Your Winter
Clothes Cleaned and
. Put Into Our
FREE MOTHPROOF BAGS
Modern Cleaners
311 W. Main
Ph. 772-4590
m
ii i e wrm j - - j a .i
I .a "aJE 1 I rs
. Dresser Desk 69.90 Bed 69.50 Hff U
add that
is young
Prospect Lions,
Auxiliary Plan
Installations
Prnt nrct Joint Installa
Hon ceremonies for officers
.h. Prnsriect Lions club and
...iiior are planned for
w.Hnoirfav. June 19 in the
r-nmmnnitv hall.
Plans for the ceremonies
were made by auxiliary mem
bers during their June 12
,iin in Bcckie's cafe at
t ininn freek.
Mn Roy Vaughn. Mrs. O.
E. Stone, Mrs. George Hub
kirrt and Mrs. Sherman Poole
gave reports on a state Lions
' anviliarv convention which
attended, and Mrs. Hes-
tnn Grieve and Mrs. Lowell
Ash officiated for initiation
rremonies.
Mrs. Hubbard, a state vice
nreiidcnt tor the auxiliary,
will act as Installing officer
fnr the installation cere
monies.
! An executive board meet
, Ing for the auxiliary is set for
Junt 26 at 7:30 p.m., in tne
'home of Mrs. Grieve.
apa, Pa, Paw
Now Rarely Used,
Survey Indicates
Kansas City, Mo. - (UPB - It
will be "father or "dad
or "daaay, or even pop
who will get all the attention
on Father's day, but some of
his old time titles are disap
pearing from the American
vocabulary.
Papa," the name most
youngsters called their la
thers SO years ago, has all
but disappeared from Ameri
can usage, researchers at Hall
mark cards report. "Pa" and
'paw" also are rare nowa
days.
The greeting card firm s
survey Indicates that the mod
ern father is most frequently
identified as "daddy' until
his children reach the age of
10 or 12.
Then it's usually shortened
to "dad" or "pop." But If he s
identified as "father" when
the children are very young,
the name usually la retained
even after they are grown
and have youngsters of their
own.
Group To Hold
Potluck Dinner
Jacksonville A meeting of
the Royal Arch Widows, pre
ceded by a potluck dinner,
will be held Tuesday. June
18 in the Jacksonville Ma
sonic temple. The event will
begin at 6:30 p.m.
All Royal Arch Masons and
guests are Invited.
Mrs. Roy Picard will be
chairman assisted by Mrs.
Robert Shores and Mrs. Ma
bel Robinson.
SPECIAL
FURNITURE
FINDS
GENUINE MAPLE FURNISHINGS
The Colonial House was able to make a special
buy of fine maple furniture at the last furniture
market. Illustrated are just a few of the collec
tion of authentically styled furniture pieces and
decorator items being offered this week at spe
cial money-saving prices. We Invite your Inspection.
DESK 49.50
CORNER TIER
CABINET
61.90
Genuine Winston Chapel
solid maple in wonderful
sugar 'n spice finish and
rubbed and polished within
an inch of its life.
Server
With Hutch ,
4.90
Round Table, 1 Leaf
With 4 Chairs 99.50
RECTANGULAR
TABLE WITH
. 4 CHAIRS
99.50
Visit Parents
Ashland-Guests last week
at the home of their parents
were Mr. and Mrs. Victor
York and son of Corvallis.
They visited with Dr. and
Mrs. M. E. Woodcl, 850 Leon
ard street, and with Mr. and
Mrs. V. J. York, 227 West
Hersey street. Mr. York Is at
tending Oregon State univer
sity, j
THE
COLONIAL
At Trowbridge Electric, Main at Fir
i ii-5
LAMP AND FIXTURES
SALE
A large selection of table, floor and
ceiling lamps are now being offered
at savings up to 50 during this
special furniture offer.
HOUSE
Use Our Customer Parking Area
Open Saturday Until 5 P.M.-Friday Until 9 P.M. (Furniture Dept. Only)