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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 24, 1956)
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Help Yourself Readers are Invited to present their problem!. All qnerfef will receive Individual attention and should be accompanied by m stamped, self-addressed envelope, directed to MARY HARRIS SfclFEKT, M.A., Department of Educa tion. The AMERICAS INSTITUTE OF FAMILY RELATIONS, 528! Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles 27, California. How Marriage Counselors Help "I'm here only becaus my wife talked me intq it," says Mr, A. seating himself at our desk and glaring at a spot above our head. "Damned if I can see how a counselor or any outsider can help our marriage. It's OUR problem and OUR marriage . . ." ' Mr. A. is right. It is his prob lem and his marriage, his and his wife's. It cannot be mended and restored while he and Mrs. A. wait for Sbe experts to diagnose and treat their trouble. It can not be left at a garage for a me chanic to un-dent the fenders and re-charge the battery while the owners take in a movie. Every one repairmen and owners must work hard and together to obtain results, or even diagnosis. Mr. A received help, quickly, because he soon realized the all out tremendous effort necessary. We listened and it was indeed largely listening as friends and specialists. We conferred with both Mr. and Mrs. A, and at the end of two months the work was well under way: they had learned to see and help themselves. The cost was about the same as many spend on en tertainment, but it bought peace of mind for a life time.. " How does counseling work? '- A counselor does not start by telling you what to do. He lis tens, while you talk out your problem and its origins. He sug gests and guides. He reinforces your understanding and ability to evaluate, to see the problem clearly and act objectively. He does not condemn. And he never, never reveals your story. He may give you reading material and suggest means of arriving at plans for the future. People consult counselors for reasons everywhere from bud gets to inlaws, from religion to murder. The real reason, of course, is not always the one given the counselor at first con ference! but before long, the client arrives at the basic reason for his disturbance. He faces It, and from there, he plans con structive therapy, under trained supervision. The most serious objection to seeking counseling is often, how can we tell who is good and who is not, among professional ad- At Reunion ' Ashland Mr. and Mrs. Don Conley, Clifford and Vernon, at tended the annual Myrtle Creek reunion held last Sunday at Ben ton Lane park. Everett Wimer of Roseburg was elected president. CALENDAR Friday 6:30 p.m. Degree of Poca hontas, Redman hall. WORM CHAMP Holyoke, Mass. (U.R) Arnold J. Hahn claims to be the world's champion worm-digger. So far this year Hahn has dug up 55, 000 worms. He said he is trying to break the mark of 110,000 he set last year. Just the s h o e school or dress. AA to D. tVi to 12. $4.95 12',i to 3 $7.95 Saxton Brown scuff tip and scuff back oxford that will wear and wear. AA to D. 8Vi to 12 $6.95 12'i to 3 7.9S vV f THE LARGEST f Xp SELLING SHOES (.V AMERICA Buster Brown Shoe Store 15 South Central to Happiness visors? There are, of course, amateurs and outright charlatans in the profession but with cau tion the client may spot them. Flagrant and phoney advertising, with extravagent claims, often proclaim the unethical. Ministers and doctors, as well as hospitals can direct the client to a sound source of advice. We, here at the American Institute of Family Re lations, maintain cross-reference files netting the entire nation, so that we may refer queries even in remote areas to th near est available help, when such is necessary. Guests Arriving For Wedding Here A number of visitors arriving in Medford today and tomorrow will attend the wedding Satur day of Miss Ann Hart to Arthur Beavens. The rites will take place at St. Mark's Episcopal church at four o clock. Among those coming are Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Davenport and two children, Diana and Mike, Pasadena, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Rollin P. Rodolph, San Fran cisco, who will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Boyle, Ross Lane; Mrs. E. A. Geary and daughter, Miss Alice Geary, Klamath Falls, who will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Vilas, Route 2, and the Misses Sally Severance and Miss Sara Patterson, Port land, Kappa Alpha Theta soror ity sisters of Miss Hart will be guests of Mr. and Mrs. Howell B. Murphy, Ross lane. Also here for the wedding will be Mrs. James Vranizan, Portland. Mrs. Vranizan, the former Nancy Lageson, and son Jimmy will be guests of her par ents, Dr. and Mrs. B. L. Lageson, Glen Oak court. Mr. Beavens and his parents, Dr. and Mrs. E. A. Beavens, Alhambra, Calif., and other rel atives of the bridegroom arrived yesterday. 1 Flower Arrangement Bulletin Available Putting summer bloora into pleasing arrangements can add charm to your home. And to help you learn to ar range flowers in attractive ways, the extension services of Oregon State college, Washington State college and University of Idaho have prepared a new bulletin, "Arranging Flowers." According to the bulletin, flower care begins whan flowers are cut. Daily water changes help keep them fresh. Practice is one of the best ways to learn display techniques, the writers say. Select everyday arrange ments as an experiment; as you find ones you like, use them for special occasions. Containers and holders are pictured in the bulletin as impor tant flower accompaniments and should be selected as carefully as the flowers. Copies of the new publication are available on request from county extension agents and the OSC bulletin clerk. for L2?..' ferrfS, mi Mil Friday. August 24. 19S6 Four Paintings To Be Exhibited During Month Four pictures have been select ed by Southern Oregon Society of Artists for exhibit in down town Medford during the com ing month. Picture-of-the-month is an oil painting of still life done by Mrs. John Wilson of Medford. The picture chosen to be hung in the Library is an oil entitled "Roses," by Mrs. Ada Andrews of Gold Hill. An oil by Dr. E. O. Muhs entitled "Kale idoscope," a study in design and color, will be shown in the Med ford Paint Store, along with another oil by Mrs. Andrews, entitled, "Spring Festival." Guests at the last meeting of the society were Mrs. Eloise Rapp and William Fontaine, both of Medford. Clifford Platz was speaker for the evening, and gave an absorb ing talk on what art meant to him as an individual and what it had done for him since he started painting. He also told of a trip along the Oregon coast, where he visited several artists, and described an exhibit he at tended. Mr Platz showed the group an oil painting he did one Sunday afternoon at Union Creek resort, showing one of the picnic shel ters in the woods. The group in vited Mr. Platz and Mr. Fontaine to select the four pictures to be shown for next month. ' Four creative wood carvings by Mr. Fontaine were displayed and were favorably received. Refreshments were served by Mrs. Ada Andrews, Mrs. Jean Neece and Warren Wolf. 1 Bsck-To-School Easy-sew this versatile style as a school-time jumper or dress add the overblouse to make it a smart ensemble! Lovely long torso lines are first in fashion for the younger set s-o-o pretty Famous for perfect fit for over 50 YEARS Bring your youngsters in now for a pair of our famous Buster Browns. They'rs made over "live foot" lasts, modeled after the feet of active children. This means perfect fit in every pair. Also Available at . . . Park View Dept. Store, Ashland Buster Brown Shoe Store, Grants Pass i ii : : c, ,-.if Mrs. Josephine Siple. (at left) and Mrs. Shirley Robbins. are two of the musicians who will play with the Samuel Pepy'i Re corder Consort of Los Angeles which will give a concert Sunday, August 26, in the Oregon Shakespearean Festival shell. Mrs. Siple plays the virginal, a 16th and 17th century spinet, and Mrs. Robbins plays the alto recorder. The 11 members of the Consort are travelinq to Ashland at their own expense to give the concert, set for 4:30 p.m. Play of the evening will be "Love's Labour's Lost" with curtain time set for 8:30 p.m. Feeding the By ZOLA Food Barbecued Fish Very Good Dish For this .delectable fish dish, use trout, cod or other small fish, split and boned; or use any of the popular fresh or frozen fish fillets. Figure half pound of fish per serving. Arrange two to three pounds boned fish on well greased bak ing dish, skin side down if whole fish is used. Sprinkle with salt. In saucepan, put one onion, finely chopped, two tablespoons butter or margarine, juice of one-half lemon, two teaspoons vinegar, one teaspoon honev. one-fourth teaspoon curry pow der or turmeric or one teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, one-third cup catsup and cayenne pepper to taste. Simmer until consist ency of thick sauce. Spread thinly over the fish with a pastry brush. Broil under moderate heat, basting with sauce from time to time, for 15 to 20 minutes until cooked through but not dry. Snice Tips for rfew Meal Interest Here are gourmet touches at almost no cost at all; ways of using up those interesting look ing spices and herbs you've ac cumulated, or that justify pur- cnase of fresh new spices. Roasts, Steaks, Chops. Rub these with mustard or ginger, garlic, onion or celery salt be fore" cooking. Add allspice, cloves, curry, chili powder to flour for browning or gravies. Meat Ideas. For variety meats such as kidney, heart, oxtail, use bay leaves, whole cloves, whole allspice, red pepper, celery seeds, curry powder or chili pow der in the sauce. If you're using milk in the sauce, you'll like poultry seasoning, thyme, mar joram or oregano. Brains and Sweetbreads. Par boil with a small bag of mixed pickling spices. Egg Excitement. Scrambled eggs, omlets, poached and soft cooked eggs take well to curry powder, chili powder, dried mustard, marjoram, thyme, or egano, onion salt, celery salt, paprika, singly or in combina tion. To eggs that are creamed in casserole or baked, add nut meg, turmeric, mustard with a touch of powdered ginger. To deviled eggs, add paprika, mus tard (either dry or prepared), onion salt, celery salt, chili pow der, curry powder. Tulare Fried Chicken It is only natural that Tulare, heart of the dairy industry, should like chicken fried with plentiful cream and butter. Broilers and fryers continue plentiful at very low cost. Wash and thoroughly dry a frying chicken that has been cut into serving pieces. Dip each piece in colorful check and plain cot ton! Pattern 9165: Children's sizesH 2, 4, 6, 8, 10. Size 6 jumper and overblouse take 2V6 yards 35 inch checked fabric; Vs yard plain. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated sew chart shows you every step. Send THIRTY-FIVE cents in coins fo rthis pattern add 5 cents for each pattern for 1st class mailing. Send to Marian Martin, care of Medford Mail Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 West 18th St., New York, N. Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Get Those LATE EVENING SNACKS aAt Family VINCENT Editor in heavy cream, using perhaps one-half cup of cream. Dredge in a mixture of flour, salt and pep per, using three-fourth cup flour. Heat one-half cup butter and one-fourth cup shortening in a heavy skillet. Put in the flour dredged chicken. Fry slowly, turning to brown both sides, until golden brown and tender. Make cream gravy of course for pouring over hot fluffy mashed potatoes or biscuits. Fresh Tomatoes Are Good Mixers Wholesome, delicious and rich in vitamin content, tomatoes are a very versatile vegetable. Vari able right now in quality, size and price, the home economist will choose the less expensive for ingredient purposes, the firm, fancy ones for slicing cold. Tomatoes are good by them selves, in salads, freshly stewed with butter, salt and pepper, to say nothing about tomato juices, sauces, catsups. And they're good in ways like these: Add a cup or so of fresh stew ed tomatoes to swiss steak, to a meat loaf or when preparing a gelatin aspic. Fresh tomato wedges will improve a beef stew or ragout. Scalloped salmon fixed with tomatoes instead of milk is delic ious. Bake halibut or other white fish in tomatoes. A little chop ped onion and some bay leaf baked with fish and tomatoes adds flavor, color and texture interest. Hash or a mixed vegetable casserole is improved with tht addition of chopped fresh toma toes. Vegetable Combinations With market bins piled high with seasonal vegetables, how about trying some new combina tions on the family. Many can be combined happily either to begin with or as left-overs. Peas and corn cut from the cob . . . spin ach and mushrooms ... lima beans and onions . . . spinach and carrots . . . peas and finely diced celery . . . corn and tomatoes. Simply add butter, sweet or sour cream, salt and pepper and serve hot. Try a dash of cinnamon for change. August Abundance Suggests Poultry, Beef Vegetables Galore Poutry Good Buy. We continue to put spotlight on plentiful fry ers and broilers as heavier sup plies than grown in former years come to market at lowest prices remembered by this foods writer. Home freeze for future use; en joy now, fried, broiled, bar becued, hot or cold. Turkeys of all sizes are surprisingly low in cost for August eating. Roasters are especially economical be cause of that good stuffing and gravy along with turkey left overs for several days of good eating. Meat Buys Many. Excellent beef buys continue in boiling, stewing and pot roasting cuts of all grades. Hamburber has all the good nutrition of fancy beef cuts, is a bargain for frequent hamburber - and - bun meals. Young Spring lamb, fine-flavored and tender is excellent buy with shoulder roasts and cuts for stewing in bargain class. Good buys" in fresh pork cuts with plenty of spareribs for barbecue ing. Variety meats should appear on our menus at least once a week, say the nutritionists; liver, heart, sweetbreads, tongue, kidneys. Watch for good buys f MARKET 1 8 1202 North Riverside OPEN EVERY L $!v NIGHT TIL M L MIDNIGHT Klickitat PUD , Plans To Build John Day Dam Goldendale, Wash. (U.R) What started out as a two-way battle between private power companies and advocates of fed eral construction today prom ised to become a free-for-all aft er the Klickitat county Public Utility District announced its interest in construction of the proposed $310 million John Day dam on the Columbia river. An application will be filed with the federal power commis sion, according to L. E. Darland, the Klickitat PUD president. It would be for a preliminary per mit to investigate feasibility of PUD construction of the dam by issuance of revenue bonds. The PUD would build the dam according to plans made by the U.S. Army engineers, Darland said. The John Day dam has al ready been authorized for fed eral construction. However, three private power companies want to finance it in exchange for a 50-year right to the 1,105, 000 kilowatt output of the dam. The three private power com panies are Pacific Power & Light, Washington Water Power, and Portland General Electric. They have indicated they were ready to put up $273 million as prepayment for power from the project. LOUISIANANS PUSH YAMS Opelousas. La . U.PJ Some 80 Louisiana "vambassadors" will leave Saturday for Milwau kee on a good will visit to pro mote interest in yams. Included in the group of erowers. shin- pers and canners will be Kay boilers, state yambilee queen. in readv-to-eat meats and specialties that are ready-to-heat-and-eat offer menu variety at reasonable cost. Fruit Parade. Peaches head fruit parade. Of eood nualitw they're priced for canning and freezine. Plums an nlontifui but there's wide variety in quality. Bartlett nears nf fin flavor are increasing in sup Dly. Gravenstein annip waenn i short. No finer apple for pie making and apple sauce; good too for out-of-hand eating. Mel ons are at their best. Plenty of seedless Thompson grapes, nec tarines. Valencias, the juice oranges, fill bins. Vegetable Buys. Cabbage, top ped carrots, celery, corn, cu cumbers, lettuce, romaine, green beans, eggplant, b.eets, dry on ions, summer squash varieties, tomatoes of variable size and quality, green onions and rad ishes for relish dish and salad making offer amazing menu variety. Fish Favorites. Fresh Chinook salmon is a seasonal delight for frying, baking, barbecueing, poaching; for serving hot at one meal, cold at another. Other steak and baking varieties in clude carp, Northern ling cod, sablefish. Fresh fillets include ling cod, rockfish, true cod, Dover sole, sea bass and petrale sole. Pan-readies include rex sole, Idaho trout, sandabs. FREEDOM where you want it! Your Charge Account Invited MAIN AND BARTLETT STREETS The 0ne - Yard Aprons! 9 Two pretty hostess aprons. with a smart new trim of em broidery. Easy, thrifty just one yard 35-inch fabric for each! Pattern 7039: One yard aprons! Pattern embroidery transfer, directions for two styles. Make them for yourself, for bazaars. 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. Two FREE patterns printed in the new Alice Brooks Needle- craft book for 1956! Stunning designs for yourself, for your home lust for yau, 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! JUST ARRIVED! hat Shipment of FOLDING ALUMINUM FURNITURE We' Been Expecting end Promising You! 30 OFF OUR REGULAR PRICES On All OUTDOOR FURNISHINGS Chaise Lounges (Alum, and Redwood) Aluminum Gliders (Single and Double) Folding Alum. Chairs with Saran Webbing Fine Redwood Folding Tables and Benches OPEN EVENINGS MOORE OUTDOOR SUPPLY 816 S. Riverside WARNERETTE "Short 10 S95 A light-as-air pull-on that dips low at the waist for a new and heavenly ease (feel (he wonderful comfort when sit ting!); and cut up at the leg for superb freedom (walking or waltzing)! You'll never know complete comfort until you slip into this brief. Come, be fitted today! In sheer slimming power net with tummy-tucking panel, tapes for hose supporters. White, pink: brief or girdle $5.95 Cotton bra J2.50 by WARNER'S8 ONLY Burelson's In Medford! Coos Bay, Eureka Studied for Mills .Portland (U.R) Owen R. Cheatham, president of Georgia Pacific Corporation, said last night that the firm was looking into the possibility of future pulp and paper mill operations at Coos Bay, Ore., and Eureka, Calif. He said the studies were being made as part of the company's long-range program for Integra tion of its Pacific Northwest operations. The projects were da scribed as part of Georgia Pa cific's new heavy paper produc tion venture. The first phase is the kraft-type mill now finder construction at Toledo, Ore. i Cheatham said studies of the pulp and paper possibilities at Coos Bay and at Eureka would fit into a pattern of future growth which he predicted for the forest products industries ' Queen Juliana Breaks With Healer The Hague, Holland (U.B Queen Juliana today "perma nently" broke with a faith heal er whose alleged influence was reported to have alienated the Queen's husband and caused a state crisis in Holland. A royal communique said the Queen and her husband, Prince Bernhard, had solved their "dif ficulties" and "We now look foi ward to the future with confit dence." A companion announcement from "authoritative sources" to Dutch newspapers said the Queen had broken "permanent ly" with faith healer Greet Hof mans, whose alleged influence brought on the crisis. The Queen and her husband both immediately left by air for Nice, France, en route to Corfu, Greece, "for a vacation." Does Your Hair Look Its Best? If not. Make an Appointment to meet MR. ED at MANN'S BEAUTY SALON You'll be glad you did! CALL 2-6434 NOW! Umbrellas and Umbrella Tables Folding Redwood Coffee Tables Fine Currier's Barbecues and Home Incinerators Redwood Club Chairs and Settees Ph. 2-5458 - Cut' J CONTROL where you need it! PHONE 2-6428 Fluhrer Building