Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, March 09, 1955, Image 2

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TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Wednesday. March 9, 1955
Work With Blind
To Be Explained
Thursday Night
Phoenix All Those interest
ed in the problems of educating
blind children are invited to at
tend a meeting Thursday, March
10, at 8 p.m. in Phoenix Com
munity building.
The meeting is sponsored by
Phoenix Lions club auxiliary,
and speaker will be Walter R.
Dry, superintendent of the Ore
gon State School for the Blind,
Salem. He will display material
used at the school and explain
how the children are taught to
read and write.
Following the program a tea
will be held and an offering tak
en for the work of the Lady
Lions with the blind. With aux
iliaries throughout Oregon co
operating, an institute is held
each year In Salem for parents
of visually handicapped chil
dren in order that the parents
may learn how to better help
their children.
Roosevel7PTA
Plans Dad's Night
The March meeting of Roose
velt Parent-Teacher association
will feature "Dad's night" and
will be held Thursday, March
10, at 8 p.m. in the school audi
torium. A panel will discuss a topic
of interest to fathers, "Physical
Education and Athletics in our
School System." Otto J. Frohn
mayer will act as moderator and
members of the panel are to be
Lee Ragsdale? physical education
superviser for the Medford city
schools. Dr. William J. Millerk
Vincent Bevis, principal 'of Lin
coln school and a Medford Sen
ior High school athlete.
A group of Girl Scouts will
present the flag ceremony. Par
ents of pupils in the second
grade will serve refreshments.
CALENDAR
Calendar notice and newi for
the society section of The Mail
Tribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition is 1 p.m Friday. Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 8
a.m. of the day of publication, and
for week day news is 5 o.n the
day before publication.
Wedeniday
7 p.m. Jackson county medi
cal auxiliary, Mrs. L. W. Buono
core. 8 p.m. Women of the Moose,
Moost hall.
Thursday
10:30 a.m. Howard Home
Extension unit, Mrs. Ruth Stock,
2411 Table Rock rd.
1 p.m. Women of St. Pet
r'l Lutheran church, at church.
1 p.m. Medford Sojourners'
club, Medford hotel.
1 p.m. Adarel Social club,
OES, Mrs. Lloyd Hamlin, 602
Arnold lane.
1:30 p.m. Phoenix Thurs
day club, home of Mrs. Cecil
Korris, 2105 Roberts road.
2 p.m. Women's Christian
Temperance union, Girls Com
munity club.
SNIDER'S
MILK
Gives
You
Calcium
1M
Butte Falls Unit
Names Chairmen
Meeting Delegate
Butte Falls Mrs. William
Edmondson, chairman of Butte
Falls Extension unit, was elect
ed delegate to a child safety
conference at the last unit meet
ing, held at the home of Mrs.
Leslie Casey.
The conference will be held
at Southern Oregon college, in
Ashland. March 25.
The project leaders, Mrs. Roy
Price and Mrs. Clyde Moore,
demonstrated how to prepare
seven different vegetables, in
cluding spinach, turnips and
broccoli, in new ways. They said
the vegetables because of their
low calorie content could have
rich sauces to increase their at
tractiveness. Mrs. Ray Trefren read a re
search paper on the study of
selenium as a trace ' element
which affects the rate of tooth
decay.
Mrs. Harvey Dalton explained
the scope of the international
women's organization. Associat
ed Country Women of the World
which is commonly known as
ACWW. She said that all home
extension women are members
of this organization and that the
"pennies for friendship" fund
pays the costs of sending dele
gates to the world wide confer
ence held once every three
years. The next ACWW confer
ence will be held in Ceylon in
1956.
Mrs. James Arnold read a
news letter from one of the girls
at Azalea House, Oregon State
college, telling about the items
of furniture added to the house
from funds sent by Oregon ex
tension units. The letter was
.written in such a way as to give
a picture of how the girls at
Azalea house live in their col
lege home.
For the spring festival in
May, the local unit decided to
exhibit copper tooling.
The next meeting will be at
the home of Mrs. Earl Remson
on Fish Lake road. The subject
will be "Simple Home Repairs."
cieily
s
Vardrobe Wonder!
Iron on Blossoms
7095
Stroke of your iron presto!
Linens bloom with tea roses'
They look hand-painted on tow
els, luncheon cloths, aprons,
sheets, pillowcases! Dip 'em in
suds the color STAYS! Make
gifts galore, best sellers for your
bazaar booth.
Pattern 7095 has twelve iron-i
on color designs in a combination
of yellow, orange, green. Four
4iix4J.i to 3 '4x8'2 inches; eight,
134x558 to 3x2?4 inches. Jiffy!
Iron-on! Washable.
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins for this pattern add 5
cents for each pattern for 1st
class mailing. Send to Medford
Mail Tribune Household Arts
Dept., P. O. Box 168, Old Chelsea
Station, New York 11, N. Y.
Print plainly NAME. ADDRESS
and PATTERN NUMBER.
WONDERFUL is the word
9154 14'224,2
in iirifct'flrrt
Half-sizers, this is our ward
robe wonder! A snap to sew
cool to wear flattering to the
shorter, fuller figure. Best of
all, do it up in minutes no
fussy frills to iron. Smart wom
en everywhere are making one,
two, three right now. Why don't
you?
Pattern 9154: Half Sizes liM,
16. 18 20 12, 221z, 2412. Size
I6V2 ,takes 3U -yards 35-inch
fabric.
This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete, illustrat
ed Sew Chart shows you every
step.
Send THIRTY-FIVE . CENTS
in coins for this pattern -add 5
cents for each pattern for 1st
class mailing. Send to Marian
Martin, care Medford Mail Trib
une Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th
St., New York 11 N. Y. Print
plainly NAME, ADDRESS with
SIZE and STYLE NUMBER.
Problems of World Trade Analyzed by League Speaker
United Nations
Is PTA Topic
Gold Hill Mrs. Everett Fa
ber, Central Point, will speak at
a meeting of Gold Hill Parent
Teacher association Thursday,
March 10, at 8 p.m. Her topic
will be United Nations.
Election of officers will also
be held.
Mrs. Cecil' Johnson, Mrs. Ken
n e t h Richardson and Mrs.
Charles Bell will serve refresh
ments. Teeth of American
Children Said Worse
Portland U.R) Dr. Cecil
Bliss of Sioux City, la., say the
teeth of American children as a
whole are worse now .than they
were 10 years ago.
Dr. Bliss said this was true
despite the fact that more of
them are now going to dentists.
He listed sugar as the number
one tooth destroyer, with poor
nutrition second.
Dr. Bliss was here for the
annual Oregon State Dental as
sociation convention.
Problems of world trade were
analyzed by Dr. John W. Swarth
out, head of the political science
department of Oregon State col
lege, when he spoke to Medford
League of Women Voters at a
general meeting in the Medford
hotel last Saturday.
He summarized Europe's sit
uation by saying: "In Europe
there are 27 sovereign countries
in an area two thirds the size of
the United States. Each country
has its own cultural, historical,
pgronomical, and economic
background pattern on which
to base its foreign trade policy."
In order to clarify the deeply
rooted regional dissension on
foreign trade in this country, he
used a map of the United States
divided into sovereignties, and
gave a "non-euclidean history,"
as he called it, of these fictional
countries showing the back
ground and accepted need for
control of imports or tariffs, fol
lowed by retaliation tariffs.
Dr. Swarthout explained that
the accounts in export-import
banks can never get out of bal
ance more than 10 percent.
When 'the 10 percent limitation
is reached there can be no more
trading between those two ac
counts until the legal balance
can be regained.
This is why, he said. Australia
cannot buy cars and machinery
ftom the United States because
we have a prohibitive tariff on
wool, therefore to the extent
that it does, Australians drive
English cars.
Dr. Swarthout told how coun
tries force others to alter their
trade thvough manipulation of
tariffs, thereby demanding cer
tain things of each other that
could only be worked out
through complicated negotiation.
Dr. Swarthout spoke of tne es
tablishment of ITO, Interna
tional Trade Organization, of
the United Nations which had
never been accepted by the
large powers of the world trade
pattern, mainly the United
States and the sterling block.
However, from the ITO he
said, came the idea of GATT,
General Agreement on Tariffs
and Trade. This organization
focuses world thought on the in
ternational implication of tariff
rates and established a means of
multilateral negotiations among
the 33 member nations.
As Dr. Swarthout finished
speaking without having offered
any solution to the need of freer
world trade, a lively question
and answer period followed.
When asked "What can we do
about it?," Dr. Swarthout an
swered. "I don't know," qualify
ing this answer with a . brief
synopsis of the problem facing
Japan in the post' war world.
Japan's natural market, he said,
is China, southeast Asia and the
United States. Of these three
markets, China is closed to trade
by the United Nations super
visory council; southeast Asia
has adopted protective tariffs in
oider to encourage its own in
fant industries, and the United
States has closed its tariff doors
to protect its labor market from
the unbalancing influx of cheap
labor produce from Japan.
If Japan cannot trade, it can
not support itself, he said, and,
therefore, being a country the
size of the state of California
with eighty five million people,
it must be sustained through a
false economy of subsidization.
Dr. Swarthout. pointed out
that as long as the United States
and other creditor nations main
tain parity prices, price deter
mined by the supply, through
prohibitive tariffs, Japan and
similar countries have no hope
of altering their economic status
nor their standard of living.
Dr. Swarthout admitted the
adjustment would come but it
would be a long hard pull
through a world educational
process. He mentioned UNESCO
as an available channel for this.
The next general meeting of
the League of Women Voters
will be the annual meeting,
April 30.
WHY PAY
MORE?
100 Tablets 49c
s mousm hnouct sa,
WEEK END SPECIAL!
.0
Your
Charge
Account
Invited
O
1 rC1 S
IRREGULARS , f 1 K ft
6 pair $99 hA
. . . . OoC . 1
pair
COME EARLT.. . QUANTITY IS LIMITED
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Small i-MM
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MAIN AND BARTLETT STREETS
Mail or phone 2-6428 for orders of
$3 or more. The "irregularities" are
so tiny they were barely apparent to
NoMends' rigid inspection system.
Here's a wonderful opportunity
to get-acquainted with NoMend's
"personalized" fit, at these
exceptional prices.
PHONE 2-6428
ss
for our NEW Alice Brooks
Needlecraft Catalog for 1955. Ex
citing,, enchanting our new de
signs are all that and even
more! Send 25 cents for your
copy of this terrific catalog
NOW! You'll want to order every
wonderful design in it!
see uhaf a difference C'H makes
... IN FLAVOR . . . IN TEXTURE
L M. G0LDEN BR0WN 0R 0LD'TIME DARK BR0WN ' jaW ' f
CondH cooky-quix
THE ONLY CANE SUfiAR .
IEFINE0 IN THE WEST! I
BASIC DOUGH: Mix l'i cups C and H
purs CANE Golden Brown or Dark
Brown Sugar, firmly packed; IVi cups
rolled oats (quick-cook type); Hi cups
flour; Vi teasp. soda; teasp. salt
'Next, stir together Vi cup shortening
(part butter); 4 tablesp. hot water; 1
teasp. vanilla. Add half the dry ingre
dients; beat smooth. Stir in the rest;
mix with hands to stiff dough. (Add 1
or 2 teasp. more hot water if needed.)
CRISPY COOKY-QUIX: Make part of
dough into little balls on greased bak
ing sheet. Flatten with glass dipped
in C and H pure CANE Granulated
Sugar. Or shape dough in slender roll,
wrap, chill thoroughly, slice thin. Bakt
6 to 8 min. at 375 (moderate).
CRUNCHY COOKY-QUIX: Mix plenty of
coconut and chopped nuts with part
of dough; make small balls don't
flatten. Bake 8 to 10 min. at 375.
117 S. CENTRAL
PHONE 2-6241
SPECIAL SILLING
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