TWO MEDFORD (OREGON)
cnwvi
San Francisco Promises
Republicans Good Eating
Br HAZEL JOHNSON
United Press Correspondent
San Francisco (U.R) San
Francisco restaurant men, warn
ing that the Golden Gate city
is no place for a calorie counter,
promise delegates to the Repub
lican convention some of the
best eating fh the world.
- Gourmets can find the food
of half a dozen different nations
In as many -blocks orr Broadway
st. Italian, Spanish, French,
Mexican, Scandinavian, and
Chinese menus all can be found
there, where Chinatown adjoins
the Italian district.
Nearby is famed Fisherman's
Wharf, a mecca for seafood lov
ers. And not too far away are
the Sukiyaki houses, complete
with cushions and Japanese slip
pers. It is almost impossible to clas
sify the city's eating establish
ments as to excellent, good or
fair. For too many factors, in
cluding checkbook and taste, af
fect the choice.
Perhaps the best way to pro
vide a food guide is to list some
of the top restaurants by nation
ality. Cafes Listed
American: The Domino Club
and The Leopard Cafe for su
perb steaks;
Armenian: Flaming shish ke
bab, yaprak sarma, and Baklava
are only a few of the specialties
of Omar Khayyam's restaurant;
Chinese: Kan's Chinese restau
rant, a relative newcomer, where
the specialty is Peking Duck,
which must be ordered a day in
advance;
KoKo Says:
We Have Just
The
SHOES
For SCHOOL BOUND FEET
P.
Sizes 8'2tol2 $7.50
Sizes 12'2 to 4 - 8.50
Sizes 6Vi to 8 $6.50
Sixes ; 8'2 to 12 . $7.50
Sizes 12'i to 4 . $8.50
Sizes 6'2 to 8 $6.50
Sizes 8'2 to 12 $7.50
Sizes 12'2 to 4 $8.50
SPECIAL SIZE
4Yi to 6 .S
Sizes 6Vi to 8 .
Sizes 8V2 to 12
SEE THESE AND MANY
MORE WONDERFUL SCHOOL
SHOES NOW AT,
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. Central Jt Main, Medfori
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MAIL TRIBUNE
Continental: Ernie's and the
Blue Fox, two of San Francisco'
more luxurious dining establish
ments; the Blue Fox (located)
across the street from the
Morgue) recently was named one
of the top 12 restaurants in the
United States;
French: The Normandie and
the Place Pigale, a favorite of
San Francisco visitors;
German: Schroeder's Cafe,
with lunch time for men only,
and The Shadow, which has a
sweeping view of the city.
Italian: Alfred's, the Fior d'
Italia, and Vanessi's head the
list of superior Italian dining
places.
Japanese: Either of the Suki
yaki houses, one located at Fish
erman's Wharf, where custom
ers must shed their shoes at the
door and sit on the floor.
Latin American: Al William's
Papagayo Room in the Fairmont
Hotel;
Polyneisan: Trader Vic's and
Skipper Kent's excel in the
South Seas atmosphere and food;
Swedish: Little Sweden for
smorgasbord;
Fisherman's Wharf: Two ol
the top "wharf" eating places
are A Sabella's Fish Grotto and
Tarantino's.
Night clubs and bistros: Those
with unusual atmosphere and en
tertainment include Bimbo's 365
Club, . the popular Forbidden
City, the Fairmont Hotel's Vene
tian Room, and Gorman's Gay
90's, to mention a few.
For Bohemia in a cellar try
the Hungry I ("I" for intellec
tual): Fack's II, Barnaby Con-
! rad's Matador, the Blackhawk,
and the Tin Angel.
Two From County .
To Attend Session
Jackson County chapter,
American Red Cross, has selected
two delegates to attend a sum
mer session at a Junior Red
Cross leadership training center,
The delegates are Luella Sny
der of Jacksonville and Bud
Quinney of Medford.
These representatives leave
August 19 for Camp Collins,
Ore. The conference is sched
uled through August 28. Stu
dents are selected on the basis
j. of potential leadership ability
ana win nave tne opportunity
to develop their skills, learn
what Red Cross is all about and
build friendships with young
people from other parts of the
country, it is stated.
Simple Embroidery
So simple, a child could do
these emboidery stitches! "Blue
bird" motifs and pretty color
to guest towels and pillowcases.
Make a set for yourself, gifts.
Pattern 7339: Transfer of 4
embroidery motifs each
5V4x9H inches. Color schemes,
directions.
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.
Two FREE patterns printed
in the new Alice Brooks Needle
craft book for 1956! Stunning
designs for yourself, for your
home just for you, our readers!
Dozens of other designs to order
all easy, fascinating hand
work! , Send 25 cents for your
copy of this wonderful book
right away!
HOTEL HOUSES COLLEGE
Tampa. Fla. (U.R) Univer-
sity of Tampa students attend i
classes in what was formerly the
Tampa Bay Hotel, a $3,500,000
structure 'built in 1889 bv de
veloper Henry B. Plant
Friday. Auguii 17. 1956
Easier To Cut
Sew and Fit
Printed Pattern
It's our new PRINTED Pat
tern with instructions clearly
printed on each pattern part
No wonder it's such a cinctt to
sew this smart I'go everywhere"
frock! Make it casual in winter-
cotton, dressy in faille or sheer
wool.
Printed Pattern 9195: Misses
Sizes 12, 14. 16, 18. 20. Size 16
requires 4'i yards 39 -inch
fabric.
This printed pattern assures
perfect fit. Easy directions print
ed on each tissue pattern part.
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,
Riverside Bridge Club
Names Week's Winners
Mrs. S. W. Alcorn and Roy
Pruitt scored 83 points to lead
north - south players ' for the
weekly meeting of Riverside
Bridge club Wednesday at the
Pruitt home. First place win
ners for east-west players were
Mrs. J. P. Vachon and Miss Iso
bel Stuart.
Additional north - south win
ners were Mrs. O. O. Alenderfer
and Thomas Randall, second,
73V4 points; Mrs. Berg Marten
and Mrs. Randall, third, 61
points.
Also .winning east-west were
Mrs. E. K. Ricker and General
Vachon, second, 65 Vi points;
Mrs. Jack Mitchell and Mrs.
George Dean, third, 62 points.
Student. Assists
At Commencement
Miss Alberta Puhl, student
nurse at' Good Samaritan hospi
tal, Portland, ' served as cross
bearer for the recent commence
ment ceremonies of the school
of nursing a release from the
school states. Miss Puhl is a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Puhl, Route 2, Box 254, Med
ford.
Miss Puhl, who was graduat
ed from Medford High school
with the class of: 1954, will en
ter her third year of training
this fall. She will arrive in Med
ford later this month for a four
day vacation.
CALENDAR
Calendar nctieet and rew for
th society section of The Mail
rribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition is 1 p.m. Friday. Dead
line for the weekly calendar is S
a.m of the day of publication and
for week day news is 5 cm the
day before publication
Friday
7:45 p.m. Gorsline circle.
First Baptist church, home of
Mrs. Helmer Tinseth, 1300
Queen Anne avenue.
12-20
For deep down enjoyment
Kttear mm rein
hzSlSsFX Baa
Help Yourself to Happiness
Readers aro lirrited to present tlltir problems. All queries will receive
individual attention and should ke accompanied br a stamped, selt-addressed
envelope, directed to MARY HARRIS SEIFERT, M.A- Department of Educa
tion. The AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF FAMILY RELATIONS, J37 Sunset
Boulevard, Los Anreles 17, California.
Don't Be Afraid To Praise
Your Familyl
"How often do I have to re
mind you to mow the lawn?
Won't you ever remember to
hang up your coat? Can't you
do anything right without spoil
ing something?"
Alice's bachelor sister was
visiting Alice for a week end.
"If anyone corrected and criti
cized me as much as you do
your children and Bob," said
Sis, "I'd either blow my top
or leave home. Everything you
Ribbons Awarded
To DogTrainer '
Miss Nyla Murray, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mur
ray, 3734 Crater Lake highway,
and a German shepherd dog
which she had trained were
awarded two blue ribbons in dog
trials held last week at the San
Rafael Guide Dog school in San
Rafael, Calif. The trials were
held for Four-H club members
from Oregon, Nevada and Cali
fornia who trained young dogs
for the school as club projects,
and who had brought the dogs to
the school after they had com
pleted the first phase of train
ing for the animals.
Miss Murray won a blue rib
bon for confirmation trials con
ducted by the American Kennel
club, and for trials conducted
by the school. In the latter con
test, she was one of four entrants
to receive a blue ribbon.
About 45 young people en
tered dogs in the competition,
and about 400 spectators attend
ed the field day. Miss MuVray
was the only entrant from.Ore
gon. Miss Murray brought home
with her a second dog to be
trained for ' the school, which
supplies guide dogs for blind
persons. The second animal is
a female Chesepeake retriever
named Honor.
Miss Murray will be a sopho
more at Medford High school
this fall. Attending the trials
with Miss Murray were her
mother, her sister, Marjo, and
the Misses ' Delora . Dunn and
Janice Butts. They returned
home last Sunday.
A Niehol's Worth of . . .
Comment On
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
United Fran FuUra Writer .
Washington ""(U.R) If I may
be pardoned, it seems to me
we are carrying this "miss" bust
ness more than
a little too far.
If a young
lady isn't a
m is s so m e-
thing or other
these days she
winds- up sit
ting on a camp
chair, waiting
for a f orelorn
Haimis Nichols swain to ask
her to dance.
The gamut has been run. We
now have a Miss Corn Tassel.
Miss Anti-Freeze. Miss . Feather
Duster. Miss Pony Tail. Miss
Honey Dew. And even a Miss
Prune Juice.
On the top level, of course,
we have Miss America, Miss Uni
verse, and on the other side of
the aisle Mrs. America.
Has Many Titles
And speaking of the "Miss"
department, the new Miss Dis
trict of Columbia can add to
her biography a . long list of
misses. ;
Perky Margo Lucey who will
represent the Capital at the Miss
A. thing in Atlantic City next
month, is a cute 5-8 brunette
(35-23-38 from top to bottom).
She has more trophies than the
law allows, almost.
Nobody with any sense would
want to do away with a miss like
Margo. She has fine talent in
dramatics; she does a bit which
her mother wrote and does it
well. And I don't have to tell
you that she fills out a bathing
suit with what the swim suit
people had in mind when they
invented swim suits. (See meas
urements above).
For a long time the 20-year-old
has been busy winning
"miss" titles. First off was Miss
Exquisite Form, which was ap
TOKAY
PURE GRAPE WINE .
PITH WINS CO., SAN ft AMCISCO, CAllf.
Crater Beverage Company
say is either a form of NO-YOU-CANNOT
or NO-YOU-MUST-NOT
do whatever it is they art
doing. Why don't you try oil
ing them up with a little praise?"
It would indeed be a good
thing if we could sometimes
hear ourselves as our family
hears us. We are at times shrews,
unable to see and praise the
good of the people around us.
We criticize our family unmer
cifully, as we would never do
strangers. We -reject their small
efforts to please with sharpness
which verges on cruelty. Un
knowingly, we often present
these attitudes, which may lay
the foundation for future parent-
child, husband-wife hostilities.
We must let our family know
that we approve of them, for
approval is important to their
well-being. Praise means love
and security, and acts as a stimu
lus to further effort to please
and do the correct thing. People
who spend most of their time
in the doghouse are not happy.
They cannot put forth their best
efforts or work to the full ex
tent of their powers. Children
love praise for hands cleanly
washed, for toys neatly put
away, for promptness at meals.
Husbands, too, thrive on a kind
word about a lawn newly mown,
a faucet mended, or a birthday
remembered.
Discipline and negative criti
cism have their place in a world
of reality, it is true, but when
ever or wherever it is possible,
let us use the positive approach
of praise and approval. Don't be
afraid to praise your family:
they will love it and you!
Miss Judy Ann Wagner
Ends Visits in City
Miss Judy Ann AVagner left
Medford for her home in Santa
Monica, Calif., after spending
the past five weeks visiting here
and in Roseburg with relatives.
She is a daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Wagner, former resi
dents of Medford.
In Medford the visitor was a
guest of her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. J. D. Wagner, 112 Cot
tage street. In Roseburg she vis
ited her grandmother, Mrs.
Katherine Shank. .
This and That
propriate. Before that, when she
was IS, rushing 16, she was in
Egypt where .she picked up
three medals in the National
Swimming Championships. If
she hadn't been worried about
missing the boat she might have
wound up as Miss Egypt.
Miss Drum Point
Other Margo laurels in the
"miss" category take a bit of
listing:
Miss Drum Point, Miss Old
Dominion Speedway, Miss Lang-
ley Park, Miss Auto Show, Miss
Cloak and Dagger, and Miss
Sophomore Queen (at the Uni
versity of Maryland).
Sunday, Margo will put on an
other crown as Miss I '.G Na
tional at a sports car show in
the Washington neighborhood.
No 20-year-old girl has a head
big enough to wear that many
crowns,
. Margo with the sparkling
green eyes said that maybe it
would be a good idea for her to
fall off a pier at Atlantic City
and "show off my backstroke."
I've got news for Margo. She
won't have time. They keep the
gals pretty busy. They are sup
posed to smile at all times. Some
times when they would- rather
hit the pad and take a long nap.
New Device Stitches
Ravel-Free Raw Seam
New York (U.R) New for
the home seamstress: a device
which mskes it possible for the
first time to stitch a ravel-free
finish on raw seam edges with
the sewing machine. .
The manufacturer of the auto
matic overcaster says, it works
as well on sheer materials as it
does on bulky woolens and slip
cover materials. The attachment
is designed to fit most standard
straight-needle machines.
California
Annual In-Service
Training Slated
The annual in-service train
ing period for teachers in the
Medford schocl district will be
held for five days starting Sept.
4, school officials have an
nounced. The schedule of events in
ludes a general meeting starting
at 10 a. m. Sept. 4 at which Otto
Ewaldsen, chairman of the board
of education and president of the
Jackson County Chamber of
Commerce, and Superintendent
of Schools Leonard Mayfield and
Assistant Superintendent Elliott
Becken will apeak.
Following a luncheon at Med
ford High school honoring new
teachers and the board of educa
tion, Dr. Paul B. Jacobsen, dean
of the school of education at the
University of Oregon, and Dr.
Miles R o m n e y, also of the
University of Oregon school of
education, will speak;
Dean Jacobsen and Dr. Rom
ney are scheduled to speak at
the dinner meeting for admin
istrative personnel Tuesdav.
Sept. 4. I
The general sessions will con
tinue Wednesday, Sept. 3,:
morning, and a principals' meet
ing is scheduled that, afternoon.
Elementary and secondary
school staffs will meet at various
schools Thursday, and - Friday
preparations will be made' for
school opening Monday, Sept. 10.
West Germany Orders
Bans Communist Party
Karlsruhe, Germany (U.R) '
West Germany's constitutional
court today ordered the dissolu
tion of the West German Com
munist party.
The court order, issued after
almost five years of hearings,
also banned all Communist or
ganizations. The ban was handed down by
the high court in a 100-page
document which said the small
but noisy West German Commu
nist party was a threat to the
constitution.
The court also ordered, .the
confiscation of all Communist
party property.
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The Family Council
Editor's Not: The ramtly Council consists of a Inert, a psychiatrist,
newspaper editor, a sromem's pass editor aad two newspaper writers. This
consult with elerrrwten of alt faltha aad dtnonunaUons. All letters art) kali
la cosnplet confidence.
Brad Mother's case is utterly
hopeless.
Ron It is for the doctors to
decide.
Brad My mother has been in
bad health for some years and
has a poor heart along with oth
er serious complications. The
doctors now say that she needs
major surgery, that she Is in poor
condition to withstand it, but
that she is not likely to live
long without it.'
Aside from the fact that I,
my brother and sister have
nearly bankrupted ourselves
keeping up with all this, 1 do
not see any point in torturing
my mother any further, since
her chances are extremely poor
and since she will not have a
worthwhile life even if the op
eration is safely performed and
a success.
I do not favor mercy killings,
but this is not the issue here.
According to the doctors, it is a.
choice between letting her dis
ease kill her and letting the doe
tors kill her, with no possi
bility of restoration of any kind
of health. I feel strongly, we
should let matters alone at this
point, and my brother agrees
with me, but our sister argues
about it frantically.
-Bote
It is a terrible burden
to us emotionally and financi
ally, but I do not feel we have
any right to make the decision.
I hate to put this up to my moth
er with all the stark details,
but I think our consciences will
torture us in . the future if we
do not follow the advice of the
doctors.
If they said the operation was
utterly impossible or utterly
hopeless, I would, of course, ac
cept their decision. But as long
as they feel she has a chance
to survive and as long as they
think a successful operation
would prolong her life, I feel it
would be a sort of murder to
fail to go through with It, even
though I understand that her
life will not be worthwhile.
a
The Council! We agree with
Rose's conclusions,. but not with
all her thinking.
The doctors' opinion about her
jjQlV--'- . . wnfortably free
tXp" above the knee... 'j '-
(""l 1 - at
survival chances is just a good
guess. It is not certain she will
survive; on the other hand, she
may withstand the operation bet
ter than expected.
Nor is it right to say that "her
life will not be worthwhile."
There are satisf actions- tn -life
on many planes. We have no
reason or right to assume that
a helpless invalid is incapable
of tome deep ' satisfactions' on
spiritual, esthetic and intellec
tual planes.
The real question here is
whether to tell the mother about
the operation and what to tell
her. If she is capable of deci
sion, she should be told the con
siderations entailed. If there is
question of her competence to
decide, she should not be told.
This calls for a; conference
between the children and the
doctors for the purpose of -deciding
just how responsibility for
the decision is to be allocated.
II would be quite wrong, how
ever, ior the children to decide
on their own authority to reject
this effort to prolong their moth
er's life. ,
(Copyright 195t.
General Features Corp.)
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