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

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TgO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE
Wednesday, December 23. 1955
loc5e&y
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New Year's Eve
Dance Planned
At Country Club
A large committee of Rogue
rGil Country club members
are in charge of the annual Tsew
Year's eve formal dance to be
held at the club Saturday, De
cember 31.
This year's dance will have
a nautical theme, with "boarding
time" set at 9 p.m. and "launch
ing ceremonies" for 1956 planned
for midnight.
Greeting guests at the door
will be Mr .and Mrs. L. C. Mc
Laughlin, and the cJub directors,
headed by Dr. and Mrs. L. Paul
Walker, will make up the wel
coming committee.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Selby, Mr.
and Mrs. Norman Buvick, Mr.
and MPs. Fred Conrad, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Olson are in
charge of arty favors and cos
tumes for club attendants and
Mr. and Mrs. Drrell Miller are
planning the traditional "balloon
festival" for midnight.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Milne and
Allen Hunt make up the decora
tions committee.
GSVIr. and Mrs. Robert Dickey
and Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Barnes
made u8 the invitations com
mittee Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Henry and
Dr. and Mrs. Scott Heetherington
are on the general social com
mittee of the club, and general
chairmen for this event are Mr.
and Mrs. Milne and Mr. and
Mrs. C. H. Barrell.
Group Gives Party
At Nursing Home
Southern Oregon Dental As
sistants' society members gave
a party for patients in the Mill
edge Nursing home Christmas
eve. The group sang carols and
presented patients with gifts.
They also served refreshments.
Guests Leave
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Rosack
er of Portland left for their
"Siome .Ionday after spending
Christmas here with their son
ingw and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Shangle, 1240
0 Woodland avenue. Other guests
for Christmas dinner were Mr
Shangle's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
J. Vefn Shangle, and ms brother-in-law
and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Bernie Mueller, Port Town
send. 4
Sister Here
Central Point Mrs. Doris
Budrow of Los Angeles is spend
ing part of the holiday season
with her sister, Mrs. filadys
Beebe, Central Point. Mrs. Bu
drow. who formerly lived in the
valley, is with Pan-American
Airways in Los Angeles and re
cently was in South America on
company business.
Family Leaves
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Penny and
two sons, Donald and Johnny,
left this morning for their home
in Lancaster, Calif., after spend
ing Christmas here with Mrs.
Penny's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Luy, 116 Newtown street.
Graceful Cape
i Mlm !
7102
fresh
berries
January
9
IT I IASY...WHIN nw
YOU FREEH THIM "DW.
Just imagine . . . blueberry
muffins in January, strawberry
sundaes in March, cranberry
cobbler for the holidays . . . the
berries are ft$l of flavor, frozen
at the peak $f freshness in a
(Manit otto c)
home 'fHBIli
FREEZER
Mc! y - r
22 Cu. " jiMiiWj111 "
Regular $599.95
HOW $54995
City
piiance
127 North Central Ave.
jMedford Phone 3-5306
137 East Main St.
Ashland Phone 9-5831
Perfect fopping for your new
spring fashions graceful cape
cracheted in easy, pretty pattern.
Crochet Pattern 7102: Direc
tions for sizes Small, Medium,
Large included. Use 3-ply fin
gering yarn or mercerized cro
chet and knitting cotton. Easy
so lovely!
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins for this pattern add 5
cents or each pattern for 1st
class mailing. Send to Medford
Mail Tribune, Household Arts
Dept., P. O. Box 163, Old Chel
sea Station, New York 11. N.Y.
Print plainlv 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!
As We Live
By ELIZABETH HU1LOCK. PH.D.
People Will Respect
You For Speaking Out
While they may not necessar
ily agree with what a person
has to say, most people respect
the person who has the courage
of his convictions and is willing
to express his opinions.
(Q) "I am 26 years old and
have a problem which is handi
capping me in business and in
everything I do.
I am afraid lo
express an opin
ion until I am
ciitp that it will
.sr-- in f&s.
? t s ''w-aaree wiin wna!
' x&
Jf think. I guess I
am what you
Royal Neighbors
Of Central Point
Install Officers
Central Point Officers for
the coming year were installed
at a meeting of Central Point
camp. Royal Neighbors of Amer
ica, held at the home of Mrs.
Clayton J. Walker, 129 North
Oakdale avenue, Medford. Mrs.
Walker is district deputy for the
lodge.
'. Mrs. Walker served as install
ing officer and was assisted by
Mrs. Carl Pearson, Medford,
ceremonial marshal: Mrs. Alice
Berry, Boise, Ida., assistant mar
shal: Mrs. Irvin Patton, inner
sentinel; Mrs. Raymond Allen,
chancellor. They were present
ed corsages and given the grand
honors of the society.
Taking office were Mrs. Frank
Ward, oracle; Mrs. J. Sanford
Richardson, vice - oracle; Mrs.
Emma Collins, past oracle;
Mrs. Victor Bursell, chancel
lor; Mrs. August Sukow, record
er: Mrs. Lettie Gregory, re
ceiver: Mrs. D. R. Allred, mar
shal: Mrs. Adena Benson, inner
sentinel; Mrs. Geneva Work
man, Mrs. Lula Mae Dye, mana
gers; Mrs. R. E. Nealon, musi
cian; Mrs. M. D. Pennoyer, flag
bearer.
Mrs. Collins, past oracle, was
presented a past oracle's pin for
her "faithful service" to the
camp and Mrs. Walker present
ed Mrs. Collins a gift from mem
bers of the camp to show "their
appreciation for her coopera
tion" while she was serving as
oracle.
Mrs. Walker's home was deco
rated appropriately for the
Christmas season, and gifts
were placed around the Christ
mas tree.
Dessert was served by Mes
dames Sukow, Pennoyer, Hen
drickson and Workman.
Couple Spends
Holidays in City
Mr. and Mrs. Francis Fann,
Corvallis, are spending the holi
days with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Denzer, 16 Western
avenue, and Mr. and Mrs. R. H.
Fann, 1040 Maple Park drive.
Mr. Fann is enrolled in fish and
game management courses at
Oregon State college, and the
couple will return to Corvallis
January 2.
Make-up Consultant Says No Woman js Really Ugly
CALENDAR
Calendar notices nd news 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 9
a m of the dav of publication and
for week day news is 5 o-m the
day before publication
Wednesday
7:30 p.m. Bethel 38, Job's
Daughters, Central Point Ma
sonic temple.
8 p.m. FL club, home of
Mrs. John Daniel, 400 Highland
drive.
8 p.m. Roxy Ann HEC, at
Grange hall.
By WILLIAM EWALD
United Press Correspondent
New York CU.RI Next to dia
monds, a girl's best friend is
probably a fellow like Richard
Willis. Particularly, with Leap
Year around the corner.
Willis, a 15-year veteran of
the radio and TV wars, is the
kind of conjurer who can make
your Aunt Tessie look like Gina
Whatever-her-name is. Well, al
most. "Actually," says Willis,
"There's no such thing as an
ugly woman. They're all essen
tially nice-appearing. And the
American woman has more flair
than any other woman in the
world."
Willis, presently employed at
WRCA-TV here, runs the sort
of video shindig which caters
to gals with personal redecorat
ing problems. A former make
up consultant for four movie
studios, Willis estimates he has
advised some 500,000 chicks and
hens over the years.
From Bow Legs To Speech
He has tackled such problems
as bow legs, knock knees, bumpy
knuckles, buck teeth, knobby
elbows and loving cup ears.
He has handed out free advice
on make-up and jewelry, dress,
diet and even diction.
"The two biggest problems
as far as most women are con
cerned, pointed out Willis, are
weight and hair. Many women
are inclined to be heavy. I
don't call them fat fat is some
thing they have in them.
"Hair style is always a prob
lem, too. The average woman
is always looking for a new style
without realizing that what may
look attractive on another wom
an may not be good for her."
Although Willis tabbed Amer
ican women "the best dressed
in the world," he unhesitatingly
labeled their little sisters, the
teen-agers, as his principal prob
lem. "I recently visited some
schools and all I could see were
blemishes of ugly clothes. Teen
age girls have the hysterical ap
proach to dress. They're copy
cats all of them seem to wear
dungarees and loafers."
Other Breakdowns
Breaking down the other
brackets of women who come to
him for advice, Willis saw things
this way:
"Girls in the bracket just over
21 usually dress for men that's
because they're looking for one.
Their problem is buying the
number of clothes they need on
a limited budget. All I can sug
gest is buying three good basic
changes for each season.
"The young married woman
faces a different problem. She
has to dress to please both her
husband and the neighborhood,
also on a small budget. Three
basic seasonal outfits should be
the rule here, too. Also a black
coat rather than a colored one."
The woman in the 40-plus
bracket, said Willis, should be
the best-dressed. But sadly
enough, he has found this isn't
always so. "Her problem is over
weight and the fact that her
l grown children want her
dress like a grandmother."
vjranama neean i oe uraD
But even the grandmother
bracket shouldn't necessarily
dress in rocking-chair style.
"When you get to elderly wom
en, the problem is one of com
fort in dress and looking well,
too. There's no need for any
woman, no matter how old, to
look drab."
As for the men, Willis, through
personal observation has found
many of them pretty ragged.
"Their ties are pretty sad.
their shirts are pretty sad and
their shoes, unshined and beat,
to are pretty sad."
But strangely enough, in all
of Willis' career, only one man
has come to him for consulta
tion. "He was a young lawyer
whose mother was a fan of mine.
I advised him on the type of
clothes to buy, the kind of ac
cessories to wear and the proper
haircut to get. I even helped cor
rect his dandruff condition."
DR. DAMMASCH STRICglg
Portland U.R Dr. F. H.
Dammasch, 76, veteran state
representative from Multnomah
county, was reported in serious
condition in a local hospital to
day after suffering a heart? at
tack followed by a cerebral
hemorrhage.
One-Yard Aprons
Caclt One Hand 35"
H 9077
-ii MEDIUM
Thrifty! Jiffy! Sew-easy! Just
ONE YARD 35-inch fabric
makes each of these pretty little
serving styles! You're sure to
want a colorful apron, trio for
your own home, others for
thoughtful hostess gifts, best sel
lers at the bazaar. Be smart
send now!
Pattern 9077 comes in Misses'
Medium size, includes all three
styles. Each apron takes 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 il, N.Y. Print plain
ly NAME,. ADDRESS with SIZE
and STYLE NUMBER.
Look Younger This
It's as simple as deciding that you want to
doing something about it.
and then
i - 5
Just two hours sometime between now and then will work
miracles of magic. Here's what to do . . .
BEAUTY SUGGESTIONS
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BEAUTY SALON
OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9
would call
Dr. Hsrlock "In my work,
I hesitate to say anything until
I am sure it is what the boss or
the other men think and it is
the same with people I meet so
cially. The result is that I say
very little ancf get embarrassed
whenever anyone asks me point
blank what I think about spme
thing. "The trouble. I believe, goes
back to my childhood when my
father used to get mad or make
fun of me if I said anything thai
didn't agree exactly with what
he thought. I learned to keep
my thoughts to myself as my
mother said this was the only
way to keep peace in the family.
Now I find I can't express my
thoughts, even if I want to. How
can 1 get over this?" R. B.
(A) The only way to get over
the fear of expressing your opin
ions is to convince yourself that
vry few people are like your
father. In other words, you will
meet very few people in business
or social life who will get angry
or ridicule you if your opinion
on a certain subject differs from
theirs.
On the other hand, most peo-"
pie will lose respect for you be
cause of your fear of expressing
yourself; no one can truly re
spect a "Yes-man." Most peo
ple, you will discover, are toler
ant of the opinions of others and
will respect a person who has
the courage to express opinions
that might not agree with those
of the people to whom he is
j talking.
! As you have been held back
i by fear of ridicule or of making
trouble for so long, you cannot
expect to change overnight.
However, if you sincerely want
to get out of the "Yes-man" class,
you must force yourself to speak
up at least occasionally. When
you discover that people react
differently to this than your
father did, that should give you
the courage to speak up more
and more often.
The one thing to avoid, how
ever, is creating the impression
that you are not sure of your
own beliefs. That will create an
unfavorable impression and
counteract what 'otherwise
would have made a good im-
j pression on your hearers,
j (Copyright 1955, General
I Features Corp.)
!This certainly is true r C f jOjTw
Though it may sound funny iWjjM fe V
Buy carpet from me fJ ) tj fcj'T"" fJ
I'll save you money! Scr' 4y
I'm no doctor but
Carpet on the floor
Will help keep the doctor
Away from your door!
. . . Bill taurine
Wool Carpet Roll Ends
Nylon Blend Rugs Roll Ends
SIZE REGULAR
12x 8' BeigeYo" Rippleweave$108.00
9'xl2'Grey Leaf Pattern.... 107.40
12'xl2' Grey Leaf Pattern. . . . 139.50
12'xl5' Grey Leaf Pattern. . . . 180.00
12'x24' Grey Leaf Pattern. . . . 288.00
NOW
$ 76.00
60.00
80.00
100.00
160.00
9'xl2' Lush Pile, Med. Gr..
12'xl4'5" Beige Tweed
9'xl2' Tight Weave Brown.
12'xl2' Tight Weave Brown
12'xl5' Tight Weave Brown.
12'x24' Tight Weave Brown
WAS
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. 133.50
. 84.00
. 112.00
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. 224.00
NOW
$ 80.00
115.00
48.00
64.00
80.00
128.00
27" Hall and Stairway Carpet
All Wool Wilton 1500 sq. yd. Now $5.59 lin. yd.
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