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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 30, 1955)
firm Gives Tips On Travel Routine For Small Babies New York (U.R) The baby of the family is a good traveler, provided his parents are careful planners. Some tips on l&w to travel with the infant set come from the nutritional department of baby-foods manufacturer (Beech Nutj. The service, which has been operating since 1938, sug gests that both mother and baby get plenty of rest before starting a trip. Eoth will be less fretful. Don't travel if a child has even a slight cold. And don't try to take a very small baby on a trip too many interruptions in his sleeping and feeding routine. Select food favorites of the child. With new places, sounds and people a baby should not be expected to learn to like new foods. Watch his feeding schedule. The child may take less food at one feeding but need more fre quent feedings. Call ahead when you can to determine what foods and facili ties are available on trains and planes. Some airlines have such a complete stock of baby foods you may not need to take more than the infant's formula. Most hotels and motels are equipped with cribs, but it is a good idea to request such equip ment in adv.ance. Garments should be simple and few. Travel will 1ik easier if you take disposable bibs and diapers, and perhaps the plastic, sterile bottles which can be thrown away. ' '. Include a few of the child's favorite toys to help make him feel at home. And ask your physician about any change necessary in a child's formula for a trip. Maybe Be will suggest the child be re turned temporarily to evaporated milk, even though at home he is taking fresh milk. If so, better start the new milk a few days before leaving home. t New Zealand's flightless, tail less, bewhiskered kiwi is the only bird with nostrils at the top of its bill. For its size, about that of a chicken, the kiwi lays the largest egg known, one pound. Week's Sewing Buy Embroidery Art Create your own masterpieces simply with needle and thread! Two beautiful flower panels of easy cross-stitch . embroidery look like heirloom needlepoint! Pattern 7047: Embroidery transfers, colorchart, directions 11 1 01 1 inches. Send TWENTY-FIVE cents in coins for this pattern add 5 cnts for each pattern for 1st- 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, jon-ons, toys and novelties! Send 25 cents for your copy of this wonderful book now. You'll want to order every design in it! SEW RE OF IMITATIONS LOOK FOR THB HAPPY LITTLE DOG (MB I SIZES ?I7 if iirMTirtfTi- Lucky JUNIORS! Three pretty parts to this new winter ward robe to mix and match in many flattering ways! Your favorite classic blouse (with two sleeve versions) jerkin in lovely long torso effect above the graceful skirt! Pattern 9396: Jr. Miss Sizes 9, 11, 13, 15, 17. Size 13 jerkin 1 yards 35-inch nap; skirt 3 yards; blouse, Va yards 35-inch fabric. 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 Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th st, New York 11,- N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Stamp Club Plans Ashland Meeting The November meeting of Southern Oregon Stamp club will be held Thursday, Novem ber 3, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Smith,- at 269 B Street, Ashland. Business for the evening will include election, of a nominating committee. Mr. Smith will pre sent the program, and the eve ning will close with stamp swap ping and a social hour. Girl Scouts To Attend Convention Seventeen adults in the Rogue Valley Area Girl Scout council will leave today for San Fran cisco to attend the 33rd national convention of the Girl Scouts of America as delegates and visit ors. It will be held November 1 through 4. Approximately 8,000 women and several hundred men who are active in Girl Scout coun cils in all parts of the country are expected to attend the San Francisco meeting. Two senior scouts will leave with the local delegates to at tend the general sessions and take part in some of the discus sions and see how the national organization operates, Mrs. Rossi said. The senior scouts who will at tend are Miss Susanne Gray, route 2, Medford, and Miss Judy Drais, Grants Pass. Delegates from the Rogue Val ley area Girl Scouts council will be voting members of the Na tional Girl Scout council which is changed with directing and co ordinating the Girl Scout move ment. From Medford the adult dele gates who are making the trip are Mrs. Michele Rossi, council president; Mrs' Al Cararra, Med ford district program chairman; Miss Mary Aldrich, executive di rector; Miss Kay Carrara, assist ant leader; Mrs. Richard Finch, leader; Mrs. Maurice Ritchey, leader; Mrs. 'J. E. Mier, neigh borhood chairman and leader. From Ashland are Mrs. Calvin Ross, Ashland district chairman, Mrs. Monte Polk, neighborhood chairman and leader; Mrs. H. K. Melick, leader; and from Grants Pass, Mrs. Kenneth Wuner, and Mrs. James Pack, both members-at-large, Mrs. Ted Kelt, regional member; Mrs. Robert Hummel, program chairman. Mrs. Robert Smith, assistant leader, Troop 127, Cave Junction is the only representative from that city. ' The delegates will hear re ports on the growth of Girl Scouting since the last conven tion twoyears ago. From Janu ary, 1953" to January, 1955 mem bership has grown from 1,931,253 to 2,350,789. Girl Scout conven tions are held every year and are attended by delegates from local units throughout the United States, Hawaii, Alaska and Puerto Rico. To bake acorn squash cut each squash in half ' lengthwise: re move seeds. Place in baking dish, cut side down, and bake at 350 degrees for 35 to 40 minutes. Turn over; brush inside with but ter and add 1 tablespoon brown sugar to center of each squash half. Continue baking 20 to 25 minutes more. Allow V2 squash for each serving. ARIES MAR. 22 APR.' 20 1-43-533 68-75-79-891 TAURUS - APR. 21 I MAY 21 o inn oJ "7 T-7 Ot OA GEMINI OQMAY 22 JUNE 22 9-JAO.VLAA CANCER fip JUNE 23 2Q&JULY23 124-34-39-41 43-70-74 LEO JULY 24 AUG. 23 ,30-40-53-54 61-64-73 VIS GO S ylfl AUG. 24 K5 SEPT- 22 T) 3- 7-2S-32 -37-47-71 STAR GAXJlC'V By CLAY & POLLAN- Your Daily Activity Gvidt t According fa fhm Start. To develop message for Sunday, read words corresponding to numbers ot your .odioc birth sign. 1 You 2 Go 3 Don't 4 Don't 5 Ba 6 New 7 Allow 8 Your 9 This 10 Places 11 Set 12 DoesnV 13 Taken 14 Day 15 Permit 16 In- 17 Aside 18 Cnonces 19 Charm 20 Your 21 Present 22 More 23 Smiles 24 Fix 25 Pleasures 26 Daydreams 27 Help 31 By 32 To 33 Today 34 Deals 35 On 36 Skip 37 Interfere 61 Normal 62 Away 63 Nothing 64 Sunday 65 Peace 66 Fields 67 Sociol 12-27-29-52, K2-69-82-87 38 Themselves 68 By 39 Contracts 69 From 40 With 41 To 42 Explore 43 Suit 44 Best 45 Religious 46 Debates 47 With 70 Your 71 Duties 72 In 73 Activities 74 Needs 75 Losing 76 Serious 77 Duties 48 Accomplish 78 Prayer y r-alse 79 Your 50 Fertile 51 More 52 Run 53 Friends 54 Enjoy 55 Your 56 Endeavors 57 Advisors 28 Pronounced 58 Absolutely 29 To 59 Seek 30 Relax 60 Points Good Adverse 80 And 81 Matters 82 Personal 83 To 84 Shine 85 Ambitions 86 More 87. Problems 88 Beckon . 89 Potience , 90 Satisfactory 1030 N -al SEPT. 23 OCT. 23 2-10-15-: 44-60-83-84 SOMMO OCT. 24 NOV. 22 sa cm Anus NOV, 23 DEC 22 o.i 4n- l5S-5r6t)j5Vg CAHHCOtN DEC 23 JAri 20 06-45-46-59, H5-72-78 AQUAHUS JAN. 21 FEB.' 19 ( 4- 5-13-16 bl-49-57 VBJ 11-17-25331 51-76-81-88M Common-Sense Beauty Advice Comes From Parisian Doctor By ELIZABETH TOOMEY United Press Correspondent New York (U.R) Ready for the latest wrinkle on how to postpone having them? A 68-year-old woman skin doc tor from Paris recently arrived here with some common-sense advice on preserving youth and postponing wrinkles. The reply Dr. Nadine G. Pay ot made to the question, "What is the single most important thing a woman can do to keep her skin looking young?" was unexpected. "Chew your food slowly," said Dr. Payot. The advice was ob viously sincere, since the gray haired woman doctor also heads a cosmetic company in Paris and could have given an easy boost to one of her own beauty products. Mirror of Soul "They say," she said, speaking slowly, since her English has become rusty in the 35 years since she last visited here, "that the face is the mirror of the soul. But the skin is only a reflection of all our organism." The first place a doctor can spot stomach trouble, the doctor said, is in the face. Slow chewing aids digestion. "Also when you chew slowly you use important muscles in your face," she continued. "If you chew very fast, it does not happen." Dr. -Payot brought with her a large supply of her own prod ucts, since she and her son re cently began selling them at a Fifth Avenue store in several other American cities. "You shouldn't think I brought something miraculous," the viva cious doctor said. "I brought only my good, medically sound products and my need for col laborators." She' consistently refers to wom en as collaborators. They must do their daily part, she empha sizes, or the best beauty aids won't help. Must Get Rest "You must get proper rest," she said. "Learn to empty your mind from troubles when you go to bed. You pray, maybe, or if somebody does- not pray you think of beautiful things. But you must rest. "And if every day you cleanse the face, massaging well around and around (her hands moved in small circles over her face to show what she meant), you can help the nature. But you cannot overpass the nature. There will come someday wrin kles." "I tell women to remember that destruction goes much quicker than construction," she said, referring to women who come to her Paris salon. "One night missed cleansing your face takes three nights to make up. And when you are young you should begin the care. x It is so much easier to keep what you have than to try and bring it back." Camp Fire Girls "learn by do ing." Achievements in work and fun earn for them Camp Fire's four ranks: trail seeker, wood gatherer, fire maker and torch bearer. Sunday, October 30. 195S MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE ELEVElf Units Plan Meetings This Week Four county home extension units plan meetings during the week. The first will be Tuesday, No vember 1, at 7:30 p.m., when Medford Parents unit will gather at the home of Mrs. R. R. Fowler, Griffin creek. They will continue the project of basket weaving, with Mrs. M. R. Scott and Mrs. A. Fila treau as leaders. The first 15 minutes will be devoted to the second gift wrap ping demonstration by Mrs. Nick DeWitt and Mrs. L. A. Ballance. Hostesses will be Mrs. Scott, Mrs. R. Jackson and Mrs. K. Hood.' Members are asked to take "Betty Crocker" coupons. Upper Applegate The old Ruch store building will be the meeting place for Upper Apple gate unit members Wednesday, November 2 from 10:30 a.m., to 3 p.m. A covered dish luncheon will be served and those who at tend should take a hot dish for the luncheon and table service. The project will be the second section of the basket weaving project. Mrs. Davis and Mrs. West will lead the demonstra tion. - Required will be an ice pick, apron, a pa.i about 10 inches long, a sponge board for cutting, sharp knife and the baskets which the women are now weav-J ing. . . Gift wrapping will be demon strated by Mrs. Redhead. For this project ribbon, gift paper, scissors, an empty box and fine wire will be needed. All women of the vicinity who are inter ested are invited. Westside Members of the Westside unit will meet Thurs day, November 3 at 11 a.m., at the Junior Grange hall in Cen tral Point. The meeting will open with a demonstration on gift wrapping by Mrs. Edward Leach and Mrs. Edward Lull. Luncheon will be served at noon and those who attend should take table service. The afternoon project will be led bv Mrs. Robert Russell and Mrs. Elmer Reinking and will be basket weaving. Those who wish to make bas kets should take a shallow pan, sponge, knife, razor blade, cut ting board, pliers, apron or towel and an ice pick or knitting needle. Mrs. Eunice Jones will be in charge of child care and those who want lnlormauon con cerning it should call Mrs. Charles Taylor, ' Normandy 4-2928. Griffin Creek Mrs. Dwight Albright, 1654. Orchard Home drive, will be hostess for a meet ing of Griffin Creek unit set for Friday, November 4, at 11 a.m. A demonstration on gift wrap ping will be given in the morn ing by Mrs.-. Randolph Hugdahl and Mrs. Glen Allen. After lunch a lesson on basket weaving will be given by Mrs. Harry J. Fitzpatrick and Mrs. Albright Mrs. George Mero is chairman of the unit. Farmers use , more steel an nually than the automobile in dustry. 4 - ' 117 S. CENTRAL PHONE 2-6241 Hotel Mattresses - Box Spring At Hotel - Quantity Prices! Here it is! One of the best bedding values Wards have ever offered. 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