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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 24, 1963)
MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE. MEDFORD. OREGON U SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 24. 1963 5 C Miss Marsha Mavflplri. momhni nf Rathal CK It 41 i j .. . w ubtiivi tin , iuivi ua hum ai Order of Job's Daughters, pictured above, wore a cranberry peau de sole gown with long, slit skirt and petal bodice for the Rcames Social Club fashion show November 16 in Medford Masonic Ten, pie. The matching stole was lined with pink. The holiday styles described as having the "young and natural look," were from Mann's Department store. Thanksgiving Dinner Slated CENTRAL POINT - The an nual Tanksgiving dinner for Nevita Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star will be served at 6:30 p.m., Tuesday, November 26 in the Central Point Masonic Hall. : Mrs. C. F. McKibben Is in charge of the potluck event, as sisted by Mrs. Leta Kyle, Mrs. Leila Lamb and Mrs. Paul Tor rance. Roast turkey and rolls will be furnished. Those attend ing should take a salad, hot vegetable or dessert. The dinner will precede the 8 p.m. session of the chapter when Mrs. Ralph Johnson and E. J. Vincent, worthy matron and patron, will preside. The JVcest nineteen t . i or "flattening, ORDER YOUR CHRISTMAS Don't Delay - December 5 Is Gift Wrapping Is FREE at . . SHOP ALL 3 FLOORS e, rar 5 : . Yule Plans Made By Prospect Club PROSPECT-Plans for gather ing greenery for Christmas dec orations at Veterans Domicil iary, White City, were made by Prospect Garden Club women when they met November 19 in the home of Mrs. James Slack. The members have cooperated annually for several years with other garden clubs of the area in furnishing material for the decorating. Mrs. Mary Brown was ap pointed chairman for the an nual Christmas dinner and par ty to be held December 17 for club members and their families in the Community Hall. (jifts Under and Montag FINE LETTERS PAPERS are personality perfect! Beautiful notes and letter size for children, teenagers, men and women. Gilt-edged, floral C, . foil s s scented, tailored. A type for everyone on your list. Grenada Couple Honored On Sixtieth Anniversary GRENADA - A double cele bration was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nicholas Web er, Grenada, November 17. It was the 60th wedding anniver sary of the couple and the birth day of the 81-year-old "bride groom." The couple reside on a small ranch, known as the White Rock Farm, on Highway 99, south of Grenada. Their home was the scene of a family reunion dinner Sunday noon with all of their children and their spouses pres ent. Their eldest son, John and wife came from San Francisco; their younger son, Nick, Jr., and wife came from Redding and their son and family, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Weber and three children of Yreka; and from Oakland came the couples daughter, and husband, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Poole (nee Delia Weber). The Poole's daughter and two children of the bay area were unable to be with the family for the occasion. Fashion Show To Be Benefit A preview of spring styles by Beeline Fashions Inc., will be modeled Friday, December 6 at 1:30 p.m., in the American Le gion Hall, proceeds from the event to be used for Christmas toys for needy children distrib uted through the Salvation Army. Refreshments will be served and a nominal admission charged. ' AoDarel will include suits and sportswear for spring in shades of hyacinth, French pink, Aca- pulco and others. Shops donating services In clude Winnie's Beauty Salon and Wiggery, Leeds Shoes, Judy Lee Jewelry and Beauty Counselor cosmetics. Women's Club Cancels Meeting; Dinner Slated The regular social meeting of the Scottish Rite Women's Club scheduled for November 25 has been cancelled due to a con flict in schedule with the re union dinner being given for the Medford Scottish Rite men, Mrs. H. C. Goldsmith, presi dent, has announced. Mrs. Frank Salyers and Mrs. George D. Osier, cochairman for the dinner, report that com mittees have been appointed for the event. Plans for the annual Christ mas party scheduled in early December will be announced later, Mrs. Goldsmith said. Soggy biscuits are the result of too much liquid, too little fat or baking at too low an oven temperature, food specialists at the U.S. Department of Agri culture say. The Tree C ome F writing papers book matches paper napkins We imprint right in the store. Come, watch "Kathy" at work on the balcony. A gift with a name or initial means so much more. PERSONALIZED CARDS NOW! the Deadline on ALBUM CARDSI . &ym 1A12ff During the afternoon a num ber of friends from throughout the county called. The couple received many flowers, gifts and cards from those attending and others who could not be present. Mrs. Weber wore a silk print dress and a white orchid, the gift of a friend of her son John, who grows them in his home in San Francisco. Two more of the orchids were used as a cen terpiece for ' the dinner table. Other flowers and arrange ments, gifts to the honored pair, were placed about the rooms, giving them a festive air. Of particular interest was a golden cornucopia filled with golden sprayed Cyprus boughs and pink carnations; this being a gift of the Neighbors of Wood craft, a lodge of which Mrs. Weber is a past guardian neigh bor and a long-time member. She is also a member of the Pocahontas Lodge and both Mr. and Mrs. Weber are members of the Greenhorn Grange. Mr. and Mrs. Weber were married in Philadelphia, Pa., November 17, 1903, the day of Mr. Weber's 21st birthday. In 1906 they moved to San Fran cisco, and in 1919 moved to Sis kiyou County. For some 25 years they operated the Siskiyou Dairy, first on the old Steele Ranch on the outskirts of Yreka and later in Grenada. In 1945 they gave up the dairy an moved to the present farm where they still have a poultry and fruit enterprise. Mr. Weber does most of the work on the place in spite of his advanced years. Mrs. Weber, though confined to a wheel chair does most of her housework, which includes canning and jelly making, which she enjoys. Holiday Theme Used by Lodge For Program Olive Rebekah Lodge women devoted their November 18 meeting to a Thanksgiving pro gram entitled "We Give Thee Thanks," directed by Mrs. Mar gery Pearson. Hall decorations were in the theme with figures of turkeys made from pine cones by Mrs. William Dyer, which were ar ranged about a cornucopia. Taking part in the program were Miss Caroline Leaders, Mrs. Joe Cave, Mrs. Evelyn Ma han, Mrs. P. M. Aldredge, Mrs. Kenneth Stockhoff, Mrs. Harry Bryant. Mrs. Frank Chapman, Mrs. Ethel Garrett, Mrs. James Hoskins, Mrs. Agnes Furch, Mrs. Henry Guss, Mrs. Grace Morrison, Mrs. uiarence riersni' ser, Mrs. Ruby Hicks, Mrs. E, B. McNew and Mrs. Gene Loy. don; Mrs. Alice Beachler from Wy oming was a visitor. 7 , ,in (f Medford, Ore. v jfcjlS J V- t v 1 Miss Emily DeVore, Rogue Valley Manor, volunteer hostess at Rogue Gallery, 220 West Main Street, is pictured during her afternoon on duty last week. Miss DeVore, who has been working at the gallery as a volunteer for about two years, is shown with a piece of wood sculpture "Column Acacia" done by Professor Melvin Schuler, Humboldt State College, Eureka, Calif. Other sculpture and oils by the professor are now displayed at the gal lery, open Monday through Saturday from 12 noon until 4 p.m. Miss DeVore, a former Medford school teacher, is particularly qualified to be a gallery hostess since she is a professor emeritus of San Jose State College where she was on the faculty for 25 years. Miss DeVore taught at Washington school from 1012 until 1916 and later was principal of Roosevelt school. She holds degrees from Stanford and Columbia universities, and has studied art with a number of eminent teachers. She was pleased to report that during her hostess duty last week, 12 visitors were at the gallery during the noon honr. mm Ever since attending the fashion show given by the Junior Women's Club Wednesday night, we'd been planning to write a column for the Sunday paper. The party had been enjoyable, and the mood light-hearted. Rolling ideas around in the back of our mind we'd decided to write about an amusing slip of the tongue by the mistress of ceremonies which brought laughter from the audience, and par ticularly from the woman whose name was involved, a woman with a sense of humor and who enjoys a joke, even at her own expense. we also had in mind an interesting little story about a woman who looks charming in her new young women at the show who from paper. It would be fun to decided, for our mood had been recent days. But the column will not be now, on the evening of a sad grey again. All we can think which struck The Tribune news the corner where the teletypes stand and said, in an odd voice, "Kennedy's been shot," and the disorganized hours which followed. We found it impossible to which ordinarily would take our clustered around the clattering which we hoped and prayed would turn out not to be true, and tried not to look at the horrifying pictures on the machine. Our faces were sad and some of us wept. , As the hours wore on we began to conjecture what the future held, what new turn of events would result from this dreadful and senseless killing and how the ending of one important life might possibly effect countless other lives in places both far and near. Without being able to really analyze and sort out our emotions, this writer somehow had the frightening sensation that we, per sonally, were involved in what had happened in Texas and that every other citizen also is involved. We ventured to express our half-formed thoughts to a co worker who said that she had much the same emotions and thoughts. "I almost always feel guilty when these tragic things happen," she said. "All of us are somehow to blame." Still later the words of the English poet and minister, John Donne, came to us. "Send not to ask for whom the bell tolls," he preached in a sermon delivered some 300 years ago. "It tolls for tnee." O.S. FOR CHRISTMAS A LIFETIME OF SEEING WITH SightLi The finest reading lamp you ever used! The finest Christmas gift you ever gavel i Completely ejlareless Fully adjustable Decorator colors combined with solid brass Browse through lh store J There's many gift Items for fiW everyone on your lilt S&H GREEN On All Caih II I 1C V IMn IJER'9 13 CAST MAIN BTKECT. ASHLANb, 0 C 0 N wig, and another about two clever modeled dresses they had made write a light-hearted column, we somewhat serious and sombre In written not now, at least. For November 22, our mood has gone of now is the disbelief and shock room when GHB walked from concentrate on the news stories attention on a busy Friday. We teletypes to read the dispatches AND FOREVER . . . Convenient Credit Terms STAMPS Purchases 1tclcfmonI 482-Ul ghf ll Old Palace Brick Used In Hohenzollern Home By EDWARD SHIELDS BERLIN (UPI) - One brick does not a house make, but one special one is a proud part of the new home of Prince Louis Ferdinand, head of the House of Hohenzollern. The 55-year-old Prince and his wife, the Russian Grand Duchess Kyra, have moved into their new home on West B e r 1 i n 's Kings Street (Koenigsallee) af ter seven years in a four-room rented apartment. Inset into a wall is that spe cial brick all that remains of the Russian Royal Palace. The Lustgarten Palace stood in the center of old Berlin, at the head of Unter Den Linden. It was shredded by Russian artillery fire at the end of World War II, and the ruins were de molished by the Communists in 1950. Parade Square On its site thev laid out a huge parade square, the Marx engels Platz, for May Day pa rades and other mass meetings. A West Berliner, watching the demolition, got a brick from the ruins by bribing a workman with a few cigarettes. The brick was turned over to Prince Louis. wno pledged tie would use it wnen ne bunt a new home in Berlin. The new house, a one and one-half story structure of white stucco with a red-tiled roof, is a far cry from the ornate, elah- STRETCHSTRAPS"! WHAT COMFORT! , WARNER'S STRETCHSTRAP CORSELETTE" Just imagine the comfort of straps that stretchl Stretch across the front, over the shoulders (just where you put them normal or wide . apart), then dive to a low, low backl And more stretch all . around you, with a controlling nylon front panel and shapely nylon cups. Enjoy that "next-to-nude" feel ing because it's made with nylon' and un- . , covered Lycra spandex. What a won derful way to shape upl B, C, white, $18.50 WHAT YOU FEEL IN A WARNER'S-1SNTTHE CORSELETTEt. Main and Bartlett Streets Phone 772-6428 . . r, o r a t e 1 y-decorated Lustgarten Palace. But it suits the prince without a kingdom. Its greatest asset is that it has enough bedrooms for the prince, his wife, and their seven children. The children, aged 13 to 24, now are studying in vari ous narfs nf Wl f.ormonu h,,t are expected to return home, weir tainer saia. Kaiser's Grandson The nrinrn is the slriact amnrl- son of Kaiser Wilhelm II, who renounced the throne of Ger- GLAMOUR COIF "Cotillion" ... the look of delightful Inno cence end contrived simplicity! But first, try one of our BRAND NEW BODY PERMANENTS The finest foundation for all the modern hair styles! NO curl, NO fuzry ends No pinning up hair every nlte. Make an appointment now! Ask for Peggy Lawellyn ' Nancy Flanagan Mae Wilion Billie Powers Phone 772-5020 ROLLAND'S OPEN fy MEDFORD ' many in November 1918. In a Republican Germany, his grandson has no titles. If the country were a monarchy, he would be Prince Louis Ferdi nand Victor Edward Adelberi Michel Hubert,' Count of Hohen zollern, Margrave of Branden burg, King of Prussia, Emperor of Germany and bearer of two score other noble titles. He remains head of the 900-year-old-House of Hohenzollern, which has ties with most of the ancient and royal families of Europe, and devotes most of his time to administering its estates and family business. Most silks are machine-washable in warm water depending on the garment construction. OF THE MONTH STUDIO OF BEAUTY 24 South Grape St. 6 DAYS A WEEK THREE Graduate Corsetieres To Fit You To Perfection YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT INVITED! ' Ride 'n Shop Member