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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1956)
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Wilsons Observe 64th Anniversary Mr. and Mrs. H. G. Wilson, 7 Chestnut street, are celebrating their 64th wedding anniversary today. The Wilsons who have lived in Medford for 30 years, were married August 31 in In diana. In spite of their advanced years, both Mr. and Mrs. Wilson are active citizens. They attend First Methodist church and at tend Shipmates' class functions; Mrs. Wilson is director of the Degree of Honor Junior club and belongs to Grandmothers' club and Jackson County Re publican Women. Last week the Wilsons attend ed the annual 4-H club fair and watched while their grandchil dren, Grace and Donny Gail of Gold Hill, won a number of rib bons for their entries. Tonight the Wilsons will have dinner with their son-in-law and daugh ter, Mr. and Mrs. C. Norman Gail, and the children, Mildred, who will return to the Univer sity of Washington this fall, Grace and Donny. The Wilsons also have a son, David Hilbert Wilson of Mar ble, Minn., and have five grand daughters, one grandson and one greet grandchild. Bridge Players In San Francisco For Tournament Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pruilt, Mrs. William Kennedy and Mrs. S. W. Alcorn are in San Francisco this week to play in the annual re gional bridge tournament of the American Contract Bridge league. All four play with Med ford Duplicate Bridge club here, and the club has set the monthly master point session for Tuesday, September 4. ' North-south winners for the August 28 session of the club were Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Boyd, first, 88 'j points; Mr. and Mrs. B. L. Sanderson, second, 73Vi, second; George Rode and Norris Porter, third. 71VS points. East-west winners were Thom as Randall and Jack Harris, first, 74; Dr. Elliott Harlow and Rob ert Dickey, second, 66'i; Mrs. Robert Elliott and Mrs. Paul McDuffee, third. 64. Minted prunes topped with soft vanilla ice cream make a refreshing dessert for summer. Cover prunes with water and cook tender. -Add some mint pillow candies and chill overnight. ENDS SATURDAY! HURRY FOR THESE VALUES! $ 14.63 Ansco RearJyflash Outfit $ 8.95 9.95 Kodak Darkroom Outfit 4.95 24.95 Fine Leather Camera Bag 12.50 6.95 Color Slide Viewer and File 3.69 69.95 35mm 2.8 Camera, Case, Flash 59.95 49.95 35mm 2.8 Camera, Rangefinder.... 39.50 39.50 Ansco Memor, 35mm 30.00 22.50 Argus Flash Camera Kit 18.00 14.35 Brownie Flash Camera Outfit 11.95 194.65 Praktiflex, Complete Outfit 99.50 29.50 Exposure Meters 19.95 119.50 Keystone 8 mag Turret 95.95 165.65 Keystone 8mm with 3 Lenses. ... 124.24 94.95 Keystone 8mm Magazine 75.95 DON'T 1 MISS OUR 75 2 Price CONVENIENT TIME PAYMENTS Society Faculty Member Takes Position Ashland Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Saltus plan to leave tomor row for Tucson, Ariz., where Mr. Saltus has accepted an assistant professorship and will teach li brary science. Mrs. Saltus has been on the faculty of Southern Oregon college for the past four years. Mr. Saltus is a retired college professor, having taught English for a number of years. Mr. and Mrs. Saltus will be accompanied south by their chil dren, Miss Janet Saltus and their son, Richard. Later in the month Miss Saltus will leave for Carle ton college, Northfield, Minn., where she will study on scholar ship for her sophomore year. The couple's older daughter, Miss Carol Saltus, has been, in Europe for the past year and will remain to teach in Rome this fall. She studied in France last year under a Fullbright scholar ship. Miss Saltus took classes at the Sorbonne and at the City University of Paris, and did re search on the subject of the French comedy theater. Woman Honored By Church Guild Mrs. Ora Rusk, who left Med ford recently to live in Culbert son, Mont., was honored by the Women's guild of Zion Lutheran church before her departure. Mrs. Rusk, who served as secre tary of the organization until her departure, was presented a gift of money from the guild mem bers which enabled her to make the trip to Montana by air. Mrs. Rusk was also given a farewell party by the staff at Sharp's Dairy supply where she had been employed for several months. The former Medford woman will teach in the Culbertson school system beginning with the fall term. She is a member of a family which has lived in Mon tana for many years, and her sister, Mrs. Belvina W. Bertino, is now completing a book "Only the Strong," which was inspired by the pioneer life of her mother. The first four chapters are to be published first in the magazine, Montana, termed the "magazine of western history." Table ireTTTTi CAMERAS PHOTOGRAPHS 120 East Main St. Friday. August 31, 1958 Seattle Family To Visit Relatives Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Van Nortwick and small daughter. Seattle, are expected in Medford, tomorrow morning to spend the Labor Day week end with rela tives. They will visit Mrs. Van Nortwick's grandmother. Mrs. Lelia Paxson, 428 West Fourth St., and her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Wil cox, 34 Elm st. No Paper Taste New York U.R Now they're making "de-paperized" paper cups. One manufacturer's new line of paper cups, plates and other containers are double plastic lined to take away any hint of paper taste, and to give the utensils the feel of a ceramic. 'Dancing' Doll Every little miss loves to have a "dancing" partner! This ador able doll is 44-inches tall as big as your daughter! Elastic straps hold doll to child's feet. Pattern 7319; Pattern trans fer, easy directions for 44-inch "dancing" doll. Dress chart. 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 Chelsea Station, New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS and PATTERN NUMBER. Two FREE patterns print ed in our ALICE . BROOKS Needlecraft book stunning de signs for yourself, for your home just for you, our readers! Doz ens of other designs to order all easy, fascinating hand-work! Send 25 cents for your copy of this wonderful book right away! 'Princess' Lines in; irrv.itT&3 Sew-easy jumper in a lovely : "princess" silhouette; flattery as- sured for every figure! Pair it ! with companion blouse, with all i your sweaters and blouses. It's I such a wonderfully versatile fa ' shion for fall and winter wear! Pattern 9262: Misses' sizes 12, 14, 16. 18, 20. Size 16 jump j er takes 4 yards 39-inch fabric; 1 blouse 2 yards 35-inch fabric. This easy-to-use pattern gives i perfect fit. Complete, illustrated ' Sew Chart shows you every step. Send THIRTY - FIVE cents in i coins for this 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 11, N.Y. I Print plainly NAME, ADDRESS 'with SIZE and STYLE NUM I Feeding the Family By ZOLA Food LABOR-LESS DAY VOTE GOES TO SANDWICHES A little .ingenuity and - re sourcefulness, and Mother gets a well-deserved holiday along with the rest of the working family. Simply set out an as sortment of breads and spreads or other sandwich makings along with appropriate finger relishes . . . and let all comers shift for themselves. Bread Varieties. Instead of the usual white sandwich loaf, con sider hamburger rolls, hot dog rolls, French rolls, hard rolls as well as whole wheat, cracked wheat, caraway rye, Swedish rye, pumpernickle. cinnamon bread, nut bread, Boston brown bread, raisin bread. Meat Sandwiches. Choose from galaxy of delicatessen meats or cold cuts. Take your pick of canned meats. Plan cold cuts from any roast or poultry. Meat sandwich accompani ments might be sliced tomatoes, cole slaw, relish, mayonnaise, sliced onions, radishes and green onions, sliced cucumber, jelly, pickles, -horseradish, mustard, slices of Cheddar, Swiss or a couple of the sliced processed cheeses. Dill pickles, of cours-;. - Cheese Sandwiches. Arrange a choice of good old American Cheddar, natural full-flavored bricks, Swiss along with pro cessed cheese and cheese foods. Then there are the specialty cheeses such as Philadelphia cream, Gouda, Bleu, Ljmburger, Gorgonzola. Leiderkranz. Toast ed cheese is a family favorite anytime. Cheese sandwich accompani ments include bacon, sliced to mato, sliced cucumbers, jam, marmalade, jelly, pineapple, shredded carrot, chopped stuffed olives, chopped nutmeats, mus tard pickle, dill pickle, cold boiled or baked ham. Chicken Sandwiches. Sliced chicken or turkey is unsurpas sed when the individual sand wich is salted and peppered, ar ranged on well-buttered or well mayonnaised bread. Sliced chick en . combines well with Swiss cheese, with cranberry sauce. Chicken salad is a favorite, plain or combined with pecans, almonds, walnuts, stuffed olives, sliced tomato, ham or bacon. For Picnic Grilling. Broiler items excellent with hamburg ers, hot dogs and barbecued meats and poultry include halved and seasoned tomatoes, halved firm bananas, canned pineapple slices. For- handsome browning, turn fruit in melted butter or margarine. Fresh Plum Marlow An unusual dessert delight in two color tones using spicy goodness of plentiful fresh plums. Refrigerate several hours or overnight. Six servings. Cut 16 marshmallows (one quarter pound package) in piec es; fold in two cupfuls sliced fresh plums and allow mixture to stand one hour or until marsh mallows soften. Whip one-half pint whipping cream until stiff enough to hold its shape. Fold in one-quarter teaspoon vanilla; then fold cream into marshmal lows and fruit. Refrigerate sev eral hours or overnight. Serve in .chilled sherbet glasses or fancy sauce dishes, topped with additional whipped cream and half a fresh plum. Fresh fruit Salad Here . is quick salad dressing that is plu-perfect with any ar rangement and combination of fresh fruits, plentiful pears, plums, peaches, oranges, ban anas. No need to make all salads look alike, you know. Arrange them all differently. Or use this dressing on "tossed" fruit. Gar nish dressing with sprinkling of ground allspice for both eye and palate appeal. Blend together one-half cup of real mayonnaise, three table spoons lemon juice, three table spoons powdered sugar, one eighth teaspoon salt and one-half teaspoon ground allspice.- Then fold in one-half cup of heavy cream that's been whipped. Makes l',4 cups of dressing; one or two batches according to number of persons served. Candy Stick Mirrors Every child enjoys chocolate drinks. They're, ah easy way to help get that rdaily quota of a quart of milk into Junior and Junior Miss." Chocolate drinks become even more festive when offered with candy sticks as stirrers. You buy -the candy sticks in glass jars. Red and white peppermint candy sticks look gay, give milk pleasant minty flavor. , An orange candy stick stirrer adds interest to chocolate milk. Add one-quarter teaspoon mint extract to each glass of chocolate milk; use mint candy stick stir rer. .. Beet Relish. Colorful, attrac tive, zestful for serving with fish. To diced cooked beets, add a little horseradish; lemon juice, salt and sugar to taste; let stand to blend. Poultry. Cold Cuts, Salad Makers on Shopping Lists Lamb will be a very popular item. on many tables over the coming week-end. Fall crop west ern . lamb is plentiful. Meat is flavorful, reaonable in cost, ver satile for fixing countless ways both indoors and outdoors as VINCENT Editor indicated in our columns today. Poultry Abundance. . One or more holiday week end meals will . feature fryers, broilers, stewing chickens as plentiful poultry is featured in markets at surprisingly low cost. Turkeys in all sizes are reasonable: very economical for family reunions, parties. . ' Cold Cuts. Can't think of a better time for giving Mother a holiday. At least one do-it-yourself meal is clearly indicated. Offer family and "company" platters of cold cuts and cheese slices and spreads along with bread assortment, butter, may onnaise, dill pickles, mustard, sliced tomatoes, green onions, radishes, celery hearts. Let some one else make a potato or mac aroni salad or put together a generous tossed green salad. Fruit assortment or chilled mel on: plenty of iced tea or coffee: maybe a pitcher of lemonade. It's made! Salad Makers. Put in generous supplies of bargain-priced let tuce, romaine and other salad makers. Salad oil and mayon naise are very good buys. Plenty of potatoes, onions and green peppers for the inevitable big batch of potato salad hopiitg for enough left over for another day. Firm tomatoes for slicing, for wedges and for stuffing. Other Vegetable Buys. Ken tucky wonder beans, carrots, celery, cucumbers, cauliflower, cabbage, corn, summer squash, tomatoes for stewing and ingre dient purpoes. Melons and Fruits. ,No finer desert (and breakfast fruit) right now than chilled watermelons, cantaloupes, honeydews. Peach es and Bartlett pears are at their luscious best. Enjoy Thompson seedless grapes, Gravenstein ap ples, nectarines, plums. Plenty of oranges, bananas. Fish Change. Vary menus with plentiful coast-caught fish. Salm on is superb eating, fresh, frozen "in the round," as fillets and steaks. Good offerings of steak and baking varieties, fresh and fresh-frozen fillets, pan-readies. Few shellfish except fresh Pa cific oysters. WHERE YOUR MAKES MORE B-'i'if 'i ivs intni nut iV illilaaasjl saaaaasaasiaasasasasaasasasasasasssiaMia sasaaaauiama.isaisasasi aaaaas fslsiss amaaaaasm , 1 ECMi MARKET-. YES, WE WILL BE OPEN BOYD'S GIANT SIZE B9 C & H , CANE COFFEE 3 H !Sa SUGAR Lots of FREE PARKING KITCHEN QUEEN FLOUR 10lbs- TO Money Back Guarantee VEGETABLE SHORTENING mmn Lb. CAN 5 C FERN NAPKINS pkg. 10' DEL ROGUE , TOMATO JUICE 4 r, SI ,00 A FINE BEER BREW 102 j. LAMB FOP. WEEK END Oregonians like lamb and many are likely to have it over the Labor Day week end because of its fine flavor, low cost, easy cooking both indoors and outdoors. Barbe que it on rotisserie or in oven; fix kebabs or offer lamburgers for pleasurable holiday eating. Help Yourself to Happiness Reader! are Invited to present their problems. AU queries will receive individual attention and should be accompanied by a stamped, self-addressed envelope, directed to MAR V HARRIS SEIFF.RT. M.A.. Department ot Educa tion. The AMERICAN INSTITUTE Boulevard, 1.0s Angeles Z7, caiuorma. How To Be Interested Every Day of Your Life Readers are invited to present their problems. All queries will receive individual attention and should be accompanied by a stamped self-addressed envelope directed to Mary Harris Seifert, M. A., Department of Education, American Institute of Family Re lations, 5287 Sunset Boulevard, Los Angeles, 27, Calif. "I'm bored to death," say many of the clients who come to us here at the American In stitute of Family Relations in Los Angeles. "Life just doesn't interest me. It all seems very fu tile. How can I make myself be interested in living?" Such ques tions come particularly from the many elderly clients whom we see here at the American Insti tute, who are sometimes con fused, unhappy, and resentful over their situation. To many of them, being old means being bored. Having many birthdays means being no longer interested in life. The key to the situation of course is boredom. Many old er people, and those not so old, DOLLAR CENTS 6 Can,98C 10 LBS. Open Sundays 9 'til 8 Week Days 8 'til 8 PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY, SAT., SUN., Aug. 31, Sept. 1-2 OF FAMILY RELATIONS, 3287 Sunset too, ar; bored because they are lonely and idle, left to think too much about themselves. What's the best cure for bore dom? The answer is forget your self. Forget yourself through ac tivities which bring you in touch with the world and with people and ideas outside your self. Many years ago Samuel Johnson one of our best known authors in the English language, said, "If a man does not make new acquaintances as he advanc es through life, he will soon find himself left alone. A man should keep his friendships in constant repair." There are many ways of avoiding boredom. The best one for you is the one which suits your personality, your situation, and your time. However, in gen eral, these are the ways we sug gest: 1. Select some hobby which is not just for the present but which promises to be increasing ly interesting as you grow older, preferably a hobby which you can pursue in company with oth er people. 2. Select a community activ Ki CENTRAL "MONDAY" Swift's CUT FRY Ml w For That Holiday Picnic "CAVEMAN BRAND" PICNIC HAM ONLY These Are By the Piece or Sliced Lg. Bologna U.S. No. 1 RUSSET SPUDS U.S. No. 1 YELLOW LARGE LOCAL J. H. PEAGHE Family Reunion Held in Gold Hill Gold Hill The George Tu lare home in Gold Hill was the scene of a family reunion Sun day. Present were Mr. and Mrs. Paul Tulare, Arcadia, Wise: Mr. and Mrs. Hugh L. Crowley, Port land; Mr. and Mrs. John Reed and sons, Mike and Pat, Redding, Calif.; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tu lare and family. Grants Pass; Mr. and Mrs. Edward Tulare and family, Joe Tulare, Mrs. Lottie Frost and Ted Tulare, all of Gold Hill. Give steamed rice a dress-up treatment by stirring in a couple of tablespoons each orange mar malade and chopped salted alm onds. Delicious with chicken. ity, possibly a charitable activ ity, and really work with it. Throw yourself into it; give it everything you have. Giving money is fine, of course, but it is just as important to give your self, and this participation brings you in contact with many new friends and associations. 3. Join a church and become actively interested in some phase of its work. Contribute yourself td it. Mingle not only with the people of your own age but also with the younger people. At tempt to help them as much as possible. 4. Select some young "person and try to help him "get along in the world." Possibly interest him in your line of work, and teach him to do it and to love it as you do. At any rate, aid him in attaining a goal in which he can find satisfaction, and you can find vicarious satisfaction through his efforts. With the help of these activi ties you will build a state of mind which will make your ma turing age pleasant and relaxed, an altruistic outgoing period, in stead of a time of frustration and inversion. When the time comes for you to step aside to make room for the younger generation, you wHl be ready for that day. You will have resources within yourself which will keep you oc cupied, busy and happy, and you s will have prepared the way out side for others to be successful through your efforts. No matter what your age, go on looking toward the future instead" of merely a past. This is the secret of being interested every day of your life. LABOR DAY! Premium UP EACH rmuu 3$CLB. Delicious 10 lbs. 3 lbs. HALES S :'Ug 5l 79 5c each