Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, September 28, 1955, Image 2

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    TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE "
Workshop
Planned
On Friday
A complete program for the
mission workshop to be con
ducted by Medford Council of
Church Women Friday at East
wood Baptist church has been
announced. Anyone interested is
invited to attend and hear ma
terial and speakers on the two
topics, "The Christian Mission in
a Revolutionary World" and "In
dian Americans." A free nur
sery for small children will be
operated wifftout charge.
Seventeen different books and
publications will each be ' re
viewed briefly during the morn
ing session, which opens at 10
a.m. The works were those
elected by the joint commission
on missionary education of the
National Council of the Churches
of Christ in the United States,
Among the 17 are "Hope Rises
from the Land" by Ralph A.
Felton; "Pattern of Things to
Come" by Dorothy McConnell
and "This is the Indian Amer
ican" by Louisa Rossiter Shot
well.
Reviewing the books will be
Mrs. H. P. Bosworth Jr., Mrs
Earl Tumy, Mrs. A. G. McMillin,
Mrs. Arthur Cummings, Mrs.
.-Thomas McCamant, Mrs. 3. Scott
THeatherington, Mrs. William
Garner, Mrs. A. L. Bowman and
Mrs. Ward L. Lampkin.
The afternoon session is sched
uled for 1:30 p.m. with Don C.
Foster, Portland, area director,
Bureau of Indian Affairs, talk
ing on "The Klamath Indian Sit
uation." Mr. Foster, a graduate
of Oklahoma A&M college, en
tered the Indian service in 1935
as head community worker at
Warm Springs, Ore., was trans
ferred to the Carson Indian
agency, Stewart, Nev., as exten
sion agent and later served as su
perintendent of that agency. He
served seven years in Alaska
with the Indians, Eskimos and
Aleuts, was transferred to Min
neapolis, Minn., in 1950 as area
director of the Indian Service
for six ftates and then to the
Portland gff ice in 1954. Mr. Fos
ter's are now' includes Washing
ton, Idajho And Oregon.
Mqt W. G. Ardry will display
Inian frtifacts and Mrs. Lyle
Schoppert will sing for the after
noon session. The Rev. Escil Hi
ser will pronounce the benedic
tion.O Mrs. J. Claude Sparks,
president, will preside for the
workshop and Mrs. S. K. Bow
man will open the morning ses
sion with devotions.
A covered dish luncheon will
be served at noon, and all wom
en attending are to .take either
a salad or hot dish and table
service. Dessert will be f urnish
edP and women of Eastwood
church will serve under the
chairmanship of Mrs. J. T. John
son. . '
CALENDAR
Calendar notices end news for
the aociffrT section of The Hall
Tribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
daV sjJition la 1 p.m Friday Dead
line tor the weekly calendar is 9
? m of th day of publication and
or Oleic day news Is 6 dj the
day before publication
Wdnay
p.m. Bow Bells chapter
DBE, Girls Community club.
8 p.m.-WOra, Moose hall,
11 Newtown st.
Thursday
1:30 p.m. Elk-Trail Parent
Teacher association, recreation
room at school.
New"Living Lather"Shampoo
Preens and Polishes Every Strand
of Your
TMIIifit now
m m stiver ttreo
.
saw jw m tw m
Thrilling Lanolin Plus Hard Water Shampoo has "Living
Lather" for ultra-lively, double-duty suds that continuously
condition hair! "Living Lather" activated by exclusive,
patent-processed Lanolin Plus Liquid supplies the essen
tial, beauty-giving sterols hair needs. Never dries' hair . . .
but leaves it lovelier, livelier, springier; softer, glimmering
with light So obedient, you "style" it right away !
Special, limited offer includes free vanity-size bottle of
Lanoltn Plus For The Hair. Glamorous "between-shampoo"
beauty-conditioner that acts in seconds ; Take advantage of
this special offer. $1.25 value for $1 plus 2t fed. tax.
Judge and Wife
Attend Opera, Show
In San Francisco
Judge and Mrs. Rawles Moore,
Old Stage road, returned yester
day from San Francisco where
they spent a week's vacation.
They saw a performance of
"Aida" by the San Francisco
Opera company, and of the new
movie, "The Virgin Queen"
starring Bette Davis in the story
about Queen Elizabeth I.
The judge and Mrs. Moore
brought back the news that be
cause of its popularity this sea
son, a special matinee perform
ance of "Aida" has been set for
Sunday, October 16. No matinee
performances were on the reg
ular schedule of the opera com
pany which opera patrons here
received before the season opened.
Sizes to 50
34-SB
Inf IflemTtT&tt
Princess lines of this wonder
ful bra promise you the most
flattering fit, comfortable firm
support for the larger tigure!
Sizes up to 50 can jiffy-sew reg
ular and long-length versions
to wear as the basis of all your
fall and winter fashions!
Pattern 9055: Women's Sizes
36, 38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50. Size
36 longer version, 1 yard 35
inch. This easy-to-use pattern gives
perfect fit. Complete illustrated
Sew Chart shows you every step.
Send Thirty-five cents in coins
for this pattern add 5 cents for
each pattern for lst-class mail
ing. Send to Marian Martin, care
of Medford Mail Tribune, Pat
tern Dept., 232 West 18th St.,
New York 11, N. Y. Print plain
ly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
For the men who have the two
most common extremes of figure
problems the short and stocky
and the tall and thin the manu
facturer has a few extra point-
Hair!
Hard Water Shampoo
J125 Value for only J1
(ttUS 2c F4. Tail
Wednesday, September 28. 1955
Eagle Point Mayor
Praises Camp Fire
As Drive Begins
Eagle Point "A campaign on
which we should all be proud to
serve" is the way in which
Mayor Don Ashpole today de
scribed Thursday's opening of
the Camp Fire Girls membership
march in Eagle Point and across
the nation.
"Turn-about is fair play," he
said, "and no group more richly
deserves our loyalty and support
than the Camp Fire Girls who
come to the aid of the public
on every conceivable occasion."
The mayor, in his salute, re
ferred to the Camp Fire Girls
who provided baby-sitting serv
ices at every PTA meeting last
year, as well as the groups who
waited tables once a month for
the Lady Lions dinners served
to the Lions. The girls also
helped sack candy for the Com
munity Christmas tree and
and planted a dish garden for
bed patients at Camp White.
The March of Dimes was not ne
glected as the girls raised $5 and
presented it to the Eagle Point
chairman.
"These are only a few of the
things Camp Fire Girls do, I
know. Their 'learn by dong' pro
gram includes acquiring new
skills and interests as well as
promoting special 'give service'
projects. And the organization
'practices what it preaches'
about good citizenship too," he
said. "One of the best things
about Camp Fire is that it wel
comes to membership girls be
tween seven and eighteen, re
gardless of color, creed or econ
omic status.
"But there are still too many
girls on the outside looking in
on the fun and friendship that
is Camp Fire," the mayor added.
"They're there because a lack of
adult volunteers prohibits an
immediate expansion of the pres
ent program. Camp Fire heeds
men and women, skilled and in
experienced alike, to enable it
to offer its health and character-
building activities to the grow
ing numbers of girls eager to
join its ranks.
"Here then is the golden op
portunity for us to 'give service'
in return to these junior citizens
who add so much to the life of
our community. A few hours of
our time each month, and our in
terest the year-around will go
far toward the success of the
drive's theme, "be friendly,
make friends, join the Camp
Fire Girls!"
Camp Fire Girls are a member
of the Medford United Crusade.
Gold HiliHealth Unit I
Announces Chairmen
Gold Hill Members 'of Gold
Hill Health unit held the first'
fall, meeting at the home of Mrs.
George Smith with Mrs. Melvin
Burnett, president, presiding t
the session. A vote was taken to
buy a hospital bed, mattress and
pad for use in the Gold Hill area.
Holding new offices are Mrs.
Delos Walker, hospital chair
man; Mrs. George Smith, sun
shine chairman; Mrs. Mary Ann
Schoendermann, seal sale; Mrs.
Mel Hood, well baby clinic; Mrs.
Norman Gail, social and mental
hygiene; Mrs. Ethel May Kan-
clier, program chairman; Mrs.
Thomas Gray, publicity; Mrs.
Maude Dickinson, membership;
Mrs. Ed Knapp, health, educa
tion and cancer fund; Mrs. Paul
Malloy, X-ray and Mrs. Carl
Boye, supply.
I just can't get over the marvel
ous way my Betsy outsmarts her
housework. Take wood floors for
instance. I hear other wives com
plain about all the scrubbing and
waxing they have to do. But not
my Betsy! She cleans and waxes
them in one easy operation with
Bruce Cleaning Wax. Why, she's
through in half the time and fresh
as a daisy! And our beautiful wood
floors are always getting compli
ments. My Betsy and her Bruce
Cleaning Wax sure make small work
of a big job. I'm
mighty proud of
both of them.
rs. For lighter
waxing on linoleum
and wood, Betsy uses
Bruce Floor Cleaner.
Bright girl,
my Betsy!"
Picture Renting
Popular With. Art Patrons
By ELIZABETH TOOMEY
United Press Correspondent .
New York (U.R) A little
old lady dropped by the Modern
Art Museum here recently,
counted out $15 and waited while
they wrapped her package.
"Do you think I'll be able to
get on the subway with it," she
asked when they handed the
package to her.
The young woman in charge
of the art lending service paled.
The bulky package contained an
original painting valued at
"Strawberry" Doily
7335
Spruce-up for winter! Crochet
this pretty doily in sparkling
colors! Luscious "strawberry"
design, with dainty lace center.
Pattern 7335: Crochet "straw
berry" design doilies; larger 17,
smaller about 12 inches. Use No.
30 mercerized cotton in gay col
or! '
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins for this pattern add 5
cents for each-pattern for lst
class mailing. Send to Medford
Mail Tribune, ' Household Arts
Dept., P.O. Box 168, Old Chel
sea Station, New York 11, N. Y.
Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS
AND PATTERN NUMBER.
- Order our ALICE BROOKS
Needlecraft Catalogue. Enjoy
pages and pages of exciting new
designs knitting, crochet, em
broidery, iron-ons, toys and nov
elties! Send 25 cents for your
copy of . this wonderful book
now. You'll want to order every
design in it!
Open Tonight
Until 9 p.m.
THE CORNER SHOE STORE
- Central at Main Medford
Services
around $300, and the fraeile
little woman was 82 years old.
"We finally persuaded her to
take a taxi to the railroad sta
tion,' Mrs. Ann Jones said. "She
lived in New Jersey."
The incident was just one ex
ample of the growing aware
ness of art in the living room
that has inspired picture renting
services in a number of major
cities.
Rented Abstract Painting
The retired school teacher
from New Jersey took home an
abstract painting for two months
for her $15. She returned it at
the end of the rental period be
cause she couldn't afford to buy
it.
Other rent paintings with the
intention of buying them if they
still like them after two or three
months of looking at them daily,
v One family in Minneapolis,
Minn., regularly rents paintings
from the Modern Art Museum
here." The museum rules require
that a renter be a member of the
museum and come in person to
select the painting. But since
membership for non-residents is
only $13.50' a year and many
men make several business trips
annually to New York, a surpris
ing number of out-of-towners
qualify.
Mrs. Jones, the wife of an ar
tist and the mother of three
small children, is in charge of
the museum's rental service on a
strictly volunteer basis. She
enjoys doing it.
Women often come in with a
.room color scheme pr a wall
space in mind to choose a pic
ture, Mrs. Jones said. And al
though this might seem a fairly
unartistic way to pick a paint
ing, Mrs. Jones defends it.
"Why isn't that perfectly legi
timate?" she asked. "If you're
doing a room in yellow you don't
want a shocking pink picture on
the wall. - Of course, a really
good picture will go almost any
where. But even, a museum is
very careful at a showing to hang
pictures next to each other that
will not detract from the effect
of either."
They rent some prints of fa
mous artists and many originals
of young artists that are valued
from $25 to a top price of $750.
Rents vary from $5.00 for two
months to $52 for three months.
Women, in Mrs. Jones opin
ion, make up their minds more
readily about a picture choice
than men, though often husbands
and wives come together.
"Men are more apt to want to
see everything before they de
cide," she said.
f-i
Couple Here
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Grey, Port
land, were guests last week of
Mr. Grey's uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. Herb Grey, 42 South
Barneburg 'road. The visitors
were en route home after a stay
in Los Angeles.
light and low...
oJl "tiuuH oitiL a iW
CASUAL
Rome's Top Restaurateurs
Say They. Use Little Garlic
By CURTIS G. PEPPER
United Press Correspondent
Rome (U.R) Rome's top res
taurant owners claim they are
being viciously maligned.by gar
lic lovers the world over.
The . city's leading . culinary
artists spoke as one man from
their spaghetti-steaming Jritch-
ens. ...
They said that garlic fiends,
especially in America, have
spread the false idea that Italy
is a garlic-gobbling nation.
"It's a lopsided ragout and
has to stop," said simmering Al
fredo di Lelio, famed "King of
the Noodles." ....'
Alfredo, now 74, held forth
over a heaping plate of galrio
less f ettuccine. His gray mustache
swayed sadly as he thought of
the harm garlic lovers were do
ing to misinform the public.
Alfredo's butter - cheese rich
noodles, or fettuccine, have "been
happily consumed by America's
first lady, Mamie Eisenhower.
Mary Pickford and Douglas
Fairbanks also munched them
back in 1927, and gave Alfredo
a golden fork and spoon, in
scribed: "To Alfredo, King of
the Noodles."
"There wasn't a garlic clove
within a mile of vthat noodle dish,
or in the one Signora Mamie ate,
or in her turkey filet or the
fresh peas I gave her just in
time," said Alfredo.
lie explained the "just in
time" by adding that peas, to be
done right, must be picked,
shelled, and rushed to the table
within one half hour,
"And she loved the meal," he
said.
Giuseppe . Ranieri, proprietor
of restaurant Ranieri, started by
a chef for Napoleon, explained
that Italians were not addicted
to garlic. Especially married
couples and lovers.
"Most of our specialties are
Veterans Bridge Club
Holds Weekly Session
Camp White Camp White
Veterans Bridge club held the
weekly session Friday, and win
ners have been announced.
High scoring pairs. for north-
south players were Mrs. S. W,
Alcorn and Joe Needham, 145,
first; Mrs. George Dean and John
Solheim, second, 136Vi; Mr. and
Mrs. Paul McDuffee, third,
129 Vi William Isaacs and Roy
Pruitt, fourth, 118.
East-west winners were Mrs,
J. P. Vachon arid Jack Love,
first, 134; Troy Dean and Asa
Kimball, second, 127; Mrs. Love
and General Vachon, third, 122;
Helen ' McDonald i and Betty
Shelton, fourth, 119.
"
A favorite trend in kitchen
decor is the use of cotton fabrics
that feature the identical print
of the wallpaper. Paint and wall
paper stores carry harmonizing
papers in a wide variety of col
ors and patterns.'
SOFTIE
A fresh new casual so
soft and light you hard
ly know you're
wearing shoes . .
Unbelievably
soft, shag
leather, with
pancake thin
wedge with
matching sole
of springy
; ' crepe.
$g95
CHARCOAL
: RUST
El
dishes without garlic," said Ran
ieri. "Italians are not a garlic eat
ing nation," he said.
In the south, garlic did domin
ate in some areas. Many Italians
emigrating to the United States
took this garlic habit with them,
said Ranieri.
Giuseppe Pepino, 55, co-owner
of another famed restaurant
Alfredo Alia Scrofa added that
an American magazine helped
confuse Americans.
it once published a cover
filled with pictures of garlic and
everyone thought we ate garlic
day and night," said Pepino.
"Naturally," he. admitted,
"there are certain plates that re
quire garlic and you can't do
them justice without that strange
cousin of the beautiful lily flow
er."
Among these dishes Pepino in
cluded leghorn shrimps (scampi
livornese), beefsteak with tomato
sauce (filetto di bue alia piz
zaiola), oil-garlic spaghetti (spa
ghetti aglio olio).
Few restaurants in Rome are
as famed for their cuisine as Pas
setto, long a hangout for gour
mets in striped morning coats
as well as 'dusty cycling shorts.
"The garlic has all but vanish
ed from our kitchen," said Pas
setto's owner, Eleuterio Guerini.
"Not only is it hard on ro
mance, it also is hard on the
liver. Raw it is not difficult to
digest, but fried, it hits the liver
like a load of lead," he said.
We Give
end
Redeem :
GOLD
ARROW
STAMPS
BpT c extra
PWt FOR THE
Imv A" EASIEST
TERMS
IN TOWN
WOTM
Women of tb Jinosa lodge
plan a business meeting for
Wednesday, September 28 at the
Moose hall, 11 Newtown street.
The session will open at 8 p.m..
and members of the publicity
committee are in charge of re
freshments.
4
A terry cloth apron is a good
idea for the cook who is con
stantly wiping her hands on her
apron. Terry cloth is highly ab
sorbent and can be tossed into
the washing machine, with no
ironing necessary.
PAINT WITH
BURGESS PAINT
& WALLPAPER STORE
Corner 6th It Holly, Diagonally
Across from the Post Office
We Give S&H Green Stamps
PHONE 2-9321
"Let Us Recommend' a Reliable
Painter"
JEWELERS
109 EAST MAIN DIAL 2-5623
OPEN UNTIL 9 TONIGHT
ZZJ