Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 9, 1963)
S A Women's News Episcopal Rector, Wife Plan Annual Open House To mark the 14th anniversary of their arrival in Medford, the Rev. and Mrs. George R. V. Bolster will be hosts to mem bers and friends of St. Mark's Episcopal church on Sunday, Oc tober 13. They will receive guests between two-thirty and five o'clock at the Rectory, 203 North Oakdalo avenue. The Bolsters came to Med ford from Bend, Ore., Septem ber 16, 1949, where Mr. Bolster had been rector of Trinity church for 10 years. Each year since, the couple has held open house in the autumn. At each of these receptions Miss A. P. Liv ingston, sister of the late Major A. Livingston, Churchwarden emeritus, has been invited to be present as an honored guest. Pouring and assisting Mrs. Bolster during the afternoon will be leaders of departments and organizations of the church, and wives of church officials. Invited to pour will be Mrs. R.s W. Dill, president of the Episcopal Church Women; Mrs. Earl Malbourn, president of St. Elizabeth's guild; Mrs. Ann Wirkkulr,. president of St. Cath erine's guild; Mrs. L. E. Ed monds, president of ht. lcrcsa s guild; Mrs. Elwood Hedberg, president of the Altar guild; Mrs. R. D. Dames, president of The Daughters of The King; Mrs. N. H. Gladfelter, wife of the general superintendent of the Sunday schools; Mrs. E. C. Conrad, representing the church choirs; Mrs. Paul J. Sclby, wife of the senior warden; and Mrs. W. D. Jensen, wife of the jun ior warden. Helping to welcome the guests during the first half of the aft ernoon will be Mrs. J. D. Mc pherson, church secretary; Mrs. Victor Milnes, wife of the key layman of the diocese; Mrs. . Douglas Roach, wife of th i'ay layman of the parish; Mrs. Wil liam Duhaime, wife of the clerk of the vestry; Mrs. Douglas Harsh, wife of the Young Peo ple's Fellowship advisor; Mrs. Hollis Kieff, wife of the church treasurer; and Mrs. Chris Bark er, acolyte mother. During the last half of the afternoon, the wives of the lay Readers will receive guests. They are Mrs. J. A. McDougall, I SKIM INTO OUIh Jpl I fm IBlO I I AIR-WEIGHT 1 JW JplT . 1 Will II , SV li fllP&v sp AjAti& an wool... Jlf m Ymm Jvwii iVsVisk? 'Vftl i i and wonderful sA U X it V "7 I ! .hd::i:rrhM,h ffi,f Wr' bau behaves so beautifully f 1 I nz:: vM yfi when lycra powers the blend (? v I jijj black, vintage, teal. 8 to 16. " I f ' V ' H jjf I . jk$ 'ft 3 Slip into the strapless that stays up as if suspended by yf 11 ''; n. h ii li"1 i 1 ,v i-Ji invisible straps. It's the Bali-Hi ... a long-line bra ingen- r 11 r! IVTjTL-r " Vt l;'.-'.?..- a i.,V ri W 1 I I f . Ml Jjrfrjj ft 'f'lHl'" Nk M iously elasticized at the back, sides and waistband with P fk tJTf ffi N acetate polyester, Lycra spandex with lace-over-nylon U ! JyJkwlwt ""X V'is ') "'ft sections and cups. Because Lycra is in i elastic Send H !"i J'S'' Jfp Tfi r y'A.' ft Bali-Hi holds you and molds you gently but firmly, cares U I I ftt' i" ' for your curves in soft, sheer beauty. It? white only. B-C Ii I ' V cups. 32.38 10.95. II WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER S, 1963 Mrs. George Bruse, Mrs. C. H. Barrell, Mrs. George Brennan, and Mrs. Fred Strang. Zuleima Club Presidents To Be , Feted Presidents of the thirteen Zul eima Nile clubs will be honored at a potluck luncheon and at the stated session of Zuleima tmple, Daughters of the Nile, on Satur day, October 12 at Ashland Masonic temple. Luncheon will be at 12 noon and the meeting is scheduled for 1 o'clock. Mrs. Arthur Peters, a past queen of the order, is luncheon chairman. She will be assisted by Mrs. Robert G. Morris, Mrs. Edwin H. Hahn, Mrs. Gayle Morris and Mrs. Williard J. Smith. Mrs. Claude Cox, Mrs. Ned Mars and Mrs. Walter Hamby will be in charge of dec orations. On Friday night, October 11, a group of local members will accompany Mrs. Murray Gar diner, temple queen, on her of- ticial visit to the South Douglas Nile club. Dinner will be at 7 p.m. in the parish hall of the episcopal cnurch at Kiddle. Monday night, October 14, Mrs. Gardiner will make the last of her 16 visits when she goes to Crescent Nile club, Crescent City, Calif. Dinner will be at 7 o'clock at the Harbor Grotto cafe. Those planning to accompany the queen are asked to telephone her before 5 o'clock Thursday evening at 772-6171 so that reservations may be made. Doctor Durno To Be Speaker Edwin R. Durno, M.D., a former congressman from this district, will speak for the next meeting of Jackson County Medical Assistants. It will be held Thursday, October 10, at 8 p.m. at Girls Community club. Dr. Durno will speak of his experiences in Washington. Hostesses will be Mesdames Grace Jones, Marie Pierce and Margaret Elkins. Medford Business and Professional Women's club will honor the 1963 Beep of the Week at a friendship dinner Thursday, Octo ber 10, at North's restaurant. The honored woman is Miss Gladys Durrand, elementary school supervisor for the 14 schools of Dis trict SI9C, who was chosen for her outstanding contribution to "her community, club and job." Miss Durrand is shown here with a New Haven regulator clock which she purchased during the re modeling of a Coos Bay school where she was principal before coming to Medford. The clock, with spring wind, was removed when an electrical deck and buzzer system was installed at the school. At the time of the school's remodeling, the superintendent was Dr. Leonard B. Mayfield, who is now superintendent of Dis trict 5 IIIC. Miss Durrand collects antiques. (Knackstcdt photo) Volunteers for UNICEF Fund Drive Are Needed As the date of Halloween ap proaches, further plans for the UNICEF fund drive by county school children are being made, Mrs. C. Rease Braley, local chairman for the United Nations agency has announced. The Jackson county drive will be conducted October 31. More women are needed to as sist in the various phases of the work and those who are interest ed are asked to call Mrs. Wal lace Robinson, 29 Ross court, 773-1717 or Mrs. W. B. Hinkle, 2437 Capital avenue, 772-4336. Mrs. Braley emphasized that women who have been associat ed with UNICEF drives in other vicinities especially are invited to assist in the Jackson county drive. The United Nations Children's fund is dedicated to helping children with food, medical and education help in depressed areas of the world. Any country which wants help from UNICEF must request it through the UN and that nation is required to match the funds given through UNICEF in a program of self-help. Agency doctors and nurses go to the nations being assisted for the purpose of teaching the na tive people the techniques of ad ministering drugs or other cura tive methods, and once the local people are able to continue the program, the UNICEF person nel leaves the field of operation to go elsewhere to repeat the process. Mrs. Braley has issued a note of caution for Jackson county residents, asking them to be alert to the fact that when UNICEF hobgoblins come to collect for the children's fund, they will be equipped with spec ial orange-paper covered half pint milk cartons and any other type or color carton will not be authorized for the UNICEF purpose. MANOR-ISMS ....... By ETHELYN EVANS This past spring one of our members, Gerald Wollam, was appointed a commissioner on the Jackson County Parks and Recreational commission. This appointment would seem to be in the nature of a "home town boy makes good" gesture. Mr. Wollam was born on his par ents' farm in this vicinity, and he is a graduate of Medford High school. Through the years he has of ten returned to the valley for hunting, fishing, hiking and ex. ploring mountain trails, streams and lakes. Also, he photographs all these recreational areas and the wildlife therein. At the University of Califor nia his catholicity of interest covered studies in anthropolo gy and engineering a wide range. After graduation he en tered the radio division of the Westinghouse company and re. mained there for 37 years as plant manager in charge of ex pansion. Naturally, after retire ment, he returned to Medford and the Manor to make his home and devote time to h i s diversified avocations and hob bies. His interest in hunting led him to collaborate with a German gunsmith in designing and build ing an unusually fine rifle; and this same interest led him to become a member and now sec retary of the Medford Rifle and Pistol club. The photographic angle of all this led him to per fect that hobby into the pro fessional class, and he is at present vice president of t h e Southern Oregon Photographic association. It is evident, however, that all the foregoing is merely sec ondary to his primary interest and hobby which is extensive travel, with a purpose, and peo ple, particularly primitive peo ples of diverse nationalities in tribes on their native ana far away home grounds; in their civilization, and in their eco- Two Men Attend Football Game WILDERVILLE - Lt. James Turner of Mather field, Sacra mento, flew north and joined Darwin Ingalls for the Baylor Oregon State college game at Portland Saturday. Lt. Turner is a graduate of Baylor. The Ingalls recently returned home after spending a 10-day vacation in Sacramento with the Turners. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREGON nomic adjustment to the mod ern world of today that is mov ing in on them rapidly. The latest of Mr. Wollams's several trips into the Arctic in pursuit of this purpose was made this spring. In Alaska and the Aleutian Islands he made a first hand study of the Eskimo and Indian tribes. All reports concerning Alaska from a num ber of different sources indicate that many native fishermen, hunters, makers of transporta tion items for water, snow and ice, and carvers of exquisite and readily salable ivory arti cles have been quick to learn about unemployment compensa tion, which seems quite like ' manna from heaven to them, He also observed the often dis astrous rapidity with which these natives succumb to mod ern diseases and the efforts be ing made to combat these at tacks. I can give only a few "high lights." Fortunately, Mr. Wol lam is preparing a documen tary manuscript on this trip as he has on other trips in the past. Eventually, it is hoped, the information may be available in the form of articles or a book. Now that he has retired, he can schedule his time to such a pro gram. We have at least four ardent stamp collectors in the Manor, so we had a very personal in terest in the recent SOPEX ex hibition. Dr. William B Giles was chairman, so did not ex hibit. But soon I shall have to write of his interesting career and absolutely fabulous stamp collection. Mrs. Graham Foote was in the process of having a big collection appraised and subsequently sold so she did not enter. Mrs. Edith Urittord s en try of Masonic stamps won a ribbon, as did Malcolm Mel ville's forms of Graf Zeppelin covers, and Mrs. Cora Maxwell also won with her unusual en try of foreign medicinal herb stamps. For each of these ex hibits, Hiram Salisbury did his usual artistic job of free-hand lettering for identification and explanation, including the Latin and common names of the me dicinal herbs and the drugs for which they were used. We Manorites number ed some 30 or 40 at the recent "tax talk" and luncheon put on by the Jackson County Federa tion of Republican Women and the Chamber of Commerce Roundtable. Some members popped up with very pertinent questions, also. CORRECTION! Last week Main and Bartlett Streets I wrote about one of Dr. and Mrs. Hagman's Chinese foster daughters being in college at Corvallis, Ors. 'Taint so! This daughter is the wife of Dr. Chih Wong, director of the Radiation center at Oregon State univer iiffrf(N'tf fy Medford ' Announcing the debut of a superb dry skin deterrent: Special Formula Concentrate Special Formula Concentrate is a golden, flowing interplay of rare lubricating oils that performs ab solute marvels for skin that's terri bly dry. Each minute drop acts synergistically... that means the oils merge to produce much greater lubrication than the same oils would when 'applied one by one. Special Formula Concentrate glides on easily, disappears and goes to work helping to soften, smooth and pamper dry skin as you sleep or any time during the day. 810.00 and S17.50 plus tax. Vee Halgren, Consultant YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT INVITED! sity. One finds when making like a reporter that news via the third party is unreliable, and that even a hasty check at the source doesn't always suffice. Mrs. Hagman thought this re porter already knew details, r Phone 772-6428- , ,,,.,,.,,.,.,, S I OS)