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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 14, 1956)
TWO MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE Reservations for Republican Event Due on Saturday Reservations for the luncheon which Jackson County Republi- can Women plan for Monday. September 17. must be made no ; later than Saturday night, it was ! announced today. Reservation; are to be made by calling Mrs. Roy Rickard, telephone 2-2573 The luncheon will be held at the home of Mrs. E. A. Littrell. i 140 Grcenway circle, at 1 o'clock. j Mrs. Frank Bash, chairman of the Republican Central com mute, will report on the nation al convention and Miss Jacque j Colton, high school student, will report on Girls' State. Mrs. Mile Altobellos topic will be ' Why Vote Republican. Riverside Bridge Club Announces Winners First place winners for the last session of Riverside Bridse club were Mrs. Jack Mitchell and Roy Pruitt, north-south, and Mrs. M M. Herman and Mrs. B. L. Sand erson, east-west. The Mitchell Pruitt team scored 105 points, and the Herman-Sanderson team 94 'i points. Other north -south winners were Mrs. Robert Elliott and Mrs. T. R. Baker, second, 91 hi points; Mrs. Thomas Randall and Mrs. Fred Purdin, third. 87 points; the Berg Martens, fourth, 83. Other winning east-west were Mrs. W. W. Stevenson and Mrs. Dolph Phipps, second. 89: Mrs. George Dean and Miss Isobel Stuart, third, 88; Mrs. Van Gil bert and Mrs. Dwight Seely, fourth, 86':. Meeting Canceled By Butte Falls HEC Butte Falls The Home Econ omics club of Butte Falls Grange announces that no meeting will be held this month. The usual monthly meetings will be re sumed October 17. The club chairman reminds members that all should be work ing articles for the bazaar to be held in the near future. CALENDAR Calendar n.tiee nfj nwi for trt ocity taction ol Tha Mai) Tnbunt must be submitted in writing and dradhna for the Sun day edition la 1 pin. Friday. Dead tine for tha weekly calendar la 9 a m of the day of Duplication and for week day newi la ft D-ra the day before publication Saturday 12:30 pm. Delta Kappa Gamma, home of Mrs. Alice Ottis, 1400 South Pacific high way. Grants Pass. WARMING COMBTNATION Chicago JiU.R) A combination heating unit, air circulator and light has been designed for in stallation in ceilings. The fan forces hot air, which rises, back down into the room. The manu facturer showed the unit at the convention -of the National As sociation of Home Builders. When troubled with an air conditioner that drips on the outside, purchase one of the plastic window boxes the same width as the conditioner. Bore holes in the lip of the window box at each corner. You'll need a small drill for this chore. Sus pend the box under the machine with strong wire. Don't Miss rjiflrl EXCLUSIVE FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE ... BRING YOU THIS Society Week's Sewing Buy Y 9082 Sew-easy and i-o-o thrifty no wonder this smart sheath-skirt is the Week's Sewing Buy! ONE Yard 54-inch fabric is all you need to make it in ANY size given! Choose a fine wool rem nant, velveteen, colorful curdu roy let its slim lines flatter YOU! Pattern 9082: Misses' Waist Sizes 24, 25, 26. 28. 30 inches. All given sizes: 1 yard 54-inch. This easy-to-use pattern gives perfect fit. Complete, illustrated Sew Chart shows you every step. Send Thirtv-fivsi estnts 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., i New York 11, N.Y. Print plainly NAME. ADDRESS with ZONE, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. State Organizer Guest of Group Mrs. Clara Gertson, state or ganizer of Degree of Honor Jun ior club, was a guest of the Med ford club for the last meeting. Mrs. Gertson spoke, and was pre sented a corsage by Carol Krause of the club. Carol Krause and Frances Art mire were awarded stripes for their sunshine caps and Donna and Carol Krause received prizes for memorizing the ritual. Connie Bittle a guest, received a prize for winning a bean bag contest. Donna Krause led the club yell, and assisted Mrs. H. G. Wil son, club director, in serving re freshments. The club will meet October 13 in Lincoln gymnasium for initia tion and to celebrate the club's 26th anniversary. Steven Wirth is a new mem ber of the club. t7 toTV$ Mm. 1 , 1 RY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT WITH THE SENSATIONAL OFFER. Flash CONSISTS OF: Exo Model II with f2.9 Everready leather case 100mm fi.J telephoto BC Fan Flash gun with n Friday. September 14, 1958 Thirty-Two Attend Picnic Meeting Of Harmony Club Medford Townsend Harmony club held a covered dish lunch eon in Hawthorne park Wednes day. Thirty-two attended. Mrs. Maud Arnold was chair man. The meeting opened with the Lord's prayer, followed with singing two verses of America. Mrs. Lydia Spradlry read the Washington D. C. Flash. A number of projects were planned for the following months ahead. Embroidery made by women members of the two clubs was displayed. Next Townsend meeting will be the auxilliary club at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday, September 19 at Carpenters' hall. 123',j West Main street. A pot luck luncheon is planned. Visitors are always welcome to attend. UP Announces New Columnist New York (U.R) Gay Paul ey, women's page editor of United Press whose by-line is familiar to readers around the world, on Monday begins a daily dispatch on U. P. wires devoted to the women's viewpoint on the news. Miss Pauley, a native of West Virginia, has spent all but a few months of her 14 years as a news paperwoman with the United Press. The column which she begins Monday has been signed by Eliz abeth Toomey, who is resigning to be married. Miss Pauley will continue to edit the women's page. First Session Set By Shrine Ladies The Shrine Ladies will hold the first meeting of the fall Mon day. September 17, at the home of Mrs. James Grigsby on the Rogue river. A covered dish din ner will be served at 8:30 o' clock and those attending are to take table service. Mrs. J. Jorgensen is president of the club for the coming year. Help Yourself to Happiness Reader! 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 Educa tion. The AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF FAMILY. RELATIONS, 5287 Sunset Boulevard, Los Anseles 27, California. YOUR CHILD IS A MIRROR "Junior is a monkey. He imi tates everything we do. He even copies our expression sometimes. Watching him is almost like see ing ourselves in a mirror. Be lieve me, it can be embarrassing! We have to be very careful when our little mirror is around. Yes, the chances are that your children don't do what you say, but do as you do. If a child is dis respectful and rude, the parents should perhaps look within themselves to see what it is they do that their child is copying. The way your child behaves to ward you is likely to be a iaitn ful reflection of the way he thinks you behave toward him. Dr. Paul Popenoe, Director of the American Institute of Family Relations in Los Angeles, sug gests that: a. Adults must look at what they do rather than what they mean to do. b. They must try to see what they do through their children's eyes. OFFER! WE ARE ABLE TO Outfit! Meritor lens . lens bracket LIST PRICE! ..List 79.50 .list 9.95 list 44.20 .list 7.95 ,1 $14160 Tot, 5 85 Kitchen Color! Add a touch of color to your kitchen with these gay fruit and vegetable motifs. Done in easiest embroidery 5-to-the-inch cross stitch and looks like applique. Pattern 7054: Transfer pattern of six embroidery motifs, each 6'2 x 8 inches. Color suggestions. 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, ZONE, AND PATTERN NUM BER. Two FREE patterns printed in our ALICE BROOKS Needle craft book 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 won derful book right away! c. They must realize that as adults they often misjudge chil dren's intent, just as children mistake parents' intentions. It is very important then for parents to remember that chil dren imitate what they do, not what they mean to do. If you want respect and consideration from your child take advantage of every opportunity that arises to praise him explicitly for things he does well. Remember that a child does not necessarily assume that silence means ap proval. If he has done something which you think is fine and good, praise him. Praise him when he is helpful. Do not criticize him merely for the things he does poorly or the things he fails to do. Attack the problem from the positive point of view, hold up to light the things he has done which you feel can honestly merit praise. Make him feel a sense of accomplishment and of worthwhileness. Let him know that you notice the things he is trying to do well, and that you feel he has done well in his efforts. Remember as we have said above, a child is a faithful mirror of your own actions. Be consistent in your beliefs and your social relationships: do not do one thing and say another, f If you theoretically subscribe to honesty, practice it. A child is very conscious of small discre pancies between doing and say ing. When you say to Junior, "Tell the man at the door that Mama isn't home just now," don't won der why Junior tells little white lies after a while. The library book about which you are very careless or the amount of change of which you have gotten too much from the grocer which you should return none of these escapes the attention of the child. He is conscious of them. The way you handle such situa tions will be the way he handles them or ones like them. Your child is indeed your mirror. To change the way he behaves to wards you. you 'must change your way of behaving toward him and your way of behaving toward the world. F(or quick mock pizza pies spread halved English muffins with butter or margarine. Top each with a slice of western grown tomato, two anchovy fil lets and sprinkle with grated Parmesan cheese. Broil. Feeding the Family By ZOLA Food Family Will Carry Torch For This Peach Torts A different and exciting des sert using plentiful, luscious fresh peaches. This tort with its peach custard filling will be remembered and requested again and again by your dessert eat ers. You can also make it later with frozen or canned peaches but it will never taste better than right now. i cups sifted enriched flour 1 cup sugar 2 tablespoons baking powder Vi teaspoon salt 13 cup shortening ?i cup milk 'i teaspoon almond extract 3 egg whites Peach Custard Confectioners' sugar Sift together flour, sugar, bak ing powder and salt. Add short ening, milk and extract and beat 2 minutes at medium speed on electric mixer or 300 strokes by hand. Add egg whites and beat 2 minutes or 300 strokes longer. Bake in greased 8-inch square pan in moderate oven, 350 degrees, 30 to 35 minutes. When cool, slice through cen ter to make 2 thin layers. Spread Peach Custard (recipe below) on bottom layer. Top with other layer and sprinkle with confec tioners' sugar. If you want to make this elegant for a party, pat the sugar through a lacy paper doily leaving design. 'Peach Custard Combine Vi cup sugar, 5.4 cup enriched flour, s teaspoon nutmeg and a dash of salt in top of double boiler. Stir in 1V4 cups milk and 3 egg yolks, beat en, and cook over boiling water until thickened. Cool. Add al mond extract and 2 cups sliced peaches. Spread between layers of cake. Plan to make again soon at familiy's insistence. Pink Lemonade Frozen lemonade and cran berry juice are another good taste combination. Mix frozen concentrate for lemonade and add preferred amount of cran berry juice or cranberry cock tail. Children love it at meal time or at snack-time. Dress Up Roast For duck, pork or ham, hol low out orange halves, cut up segments and combine with can ned apple sauce. Refill shells and place around the platter. Pretty Cara of Cooked Poultry Important For now and for remembering always, poultry should be re frigerated promptly when it comes from the table. It is a fallacy to believe that placing hot foods in a refrigerator causes them to spoil. If the bird has been stuffed, all the stuffing should be re moved. Refrigerate stuffing sep arately in a covered container. Wrap turkey loosely in alumin um foil, parchment or waxed paper. This prevents drying out and loss of flavor. It is obvious ly easier to refrigerate the tur key if the meat is removed from the bones. The bones are a good base for soup stick: should be cracked, wrapped well and re frigerated if soup is not made soon. Gravy should also be refriger ated in a separate covered con tainer. Do not let turkey stand at room temperature to be used for snacks later in the day. Re frigerate and bring out again when needed. Cooked turkey should be used in about three days. If properly wrapped, small meal size units may be frozen and served within a month. Carrot-Raisin Salad A stout hearted salad for growing boys and men. Serve on bed of shredded salad greens. Let l2 cup raisins stand in warm water until plump: drain. Mix with 3 cups grated carrots. Com bine i cup real mayonnaise with 1 tablespoon orange juice, 1 teaspoon grated orange rind and 1 teaspoon lemon juice. Add to carrot-raisins mixture and toss lightly with a fork. Cottage cheese is very good with this. Spiced Vinegar Many salad dressing makers feel that a spiced vinegar gives, extra tang to salad dressings. Some add this to stew and grav ies as well as to salad dressings. Keep in tightly covered jar in refrigerator for 2 weeks; then strain before using. In a one quart mason jar, place ounce mustard seed. Vi ounce each of whole cloves, mace, allspice, pepper, celery seed. 1 tablespoon sugar. 1 tea spoon salt and 1 bay leaf: cover with cider vinegar to fill jar. We repeat, let sand in tightly closed jar for 2 weeks; strain and it Is ready to use. A good supply, -you'll agree. Bargains There are so many good things at reasonable prices for menu planning that we have difficulty in knowing which to headline; VINCENT Edits will try to cover them all. Abundant Poultry Fryers have been at new lows; continue bargains in good eat ing. Turkeys in all sizes are in heavy supply for broiling, fry ing, roasting. Good second day eating no matter how you fix them, so plan accordingly. Plenty of eggs with prices in some areas ten to twelve cents lower than at this time last year. Send the family to school and to work fortified with two eggs each, scrambled, fried or soft cooked. Make custards more often. Meat Buys The fancy cuts of meat are moderate to high in cost but there are plenty of economy cuts for good eating at surpris ingly small cost. Nutritional values are the same. Lamb fore quarter cuts are budget buys, so are chops and roasts from the shoulder and breasts and cuts for stewing. Beef best buys are also in the forequarter cuts. The chuck alone accounts formore than one fourth of the beef carcass; cuts for pot roasts, stews, braising. Much of this also goes into bar gain priced ground beef for ham burgers, meat loafs, meat balls. Shopping will reveal some good smoked pork buys with fresh pork prices wending way up ward. Fresh Fruits Spotlight is on abundant grapes with Thompson seedless, the firm, tender, medium-size, green ish white variety, piled high at reasonable cost. Tokays are be ginning to roll; will soon be plentiful. Bartlett pears are be ing harvested early this year. Keep in touch with your fruit man on supplies and prices for canning and otherwise preserv ing. Markets display superlative peaches in several varieties. Enjoy the short-seasoned Grav- enstein apples which are thought unsurpassed for green apple pies and apple sauce. Oranges, lemons, plums, bananas are piled high along with can taloupes, honeydews and water melons of exceptional quality and flavor. Pineapples from Hawaii appeal to many. Vegetable Buys Corn of top quality, cucumb ers for salads, relish, pickling and cooking. Kentucky wonder beans, celery, lettuce, green pep pers, sweet Spanish and yellow onions, summer squash varieties, golden carrots, crisp cabbage. Small size tomatoes are the bet ter buys; enjoy them sliced, in salads, stewed, combined with other vegetables. Gourmat Grapes Combine Vi cup sour cream m. AJtfs n'... oil. 11V w - mtorooo States' Rights Party in Convention Memphis, Tenn. (U.PJ A "third party" claiming it holds the balance of power in the pres idential race opened a national convention today with 2,500 delegates on hand from 23 states. The States' Rights Party, a mingling of bolting Southern conservative Democrats and northern anti-federalists, is of fering independent electoral slates. Clarence E. Manion, former dean of the Notre Dame Law School, will make the keynote address tonight. The convention ends Saturday. and 2 teaspoons brown sugar; refrigerate for at least one hour. Toss with lVj to 2 pounds stemmed seedless grapes until lightly coated. Spoon into sher bet glasses; refrigerate. Serve with toasted pound cake. Grape Garnish. Grapes are at tractive as garnish for appetiz ers, salads, desserts; add color, beauty and nutrition. Use plain or frosted grapes singly, in clusters, in bunches. Meat Salad Note. Add while seedless grapes to chicken salad or ham salad. To Frost Grapes. Beat an egg white only until frothy; dip grapes and when nearly dry. shake fine granulated sugar over all. If you'd like tinted grapes for some decorative rea son, just add a drop of fruit coloring to the sugar. Place on waxed paper to dry allowing 15 to 20 minutes. Grapa-Pear Salad This long-time party favorite resembles a bunch of grapes. For B servings, arrange chicory or grape leaf on plates. Place pear half on leaf, flat side down. Mix 6 ounces cream cheese and Vi cup cream and spread pear liberally with mixture. Using about 2 pounds of white seed less grapes, cut grapes into halves and place flat side down on the cheese-covered pear. Serve with French dressing on the side. Seeded white Tokays can also be used for this hand some salad. Or offer b dessert with whipped cream on side. Daisy Salad. Dissolve on pack age of lemon gelatin in one cup of hot water. Add cup pine apple juice and juice of one lemon. Stir in V4 cup seedless grapes and 1 cup chopped water cress. Pour into molds or cus tard cups and chill. Unmold on lettuce and heap cottage cheese all around. Garnish with cress. Cabbage Comments. The out er green leaves of cabbage con tain far greater quantitites of vitamin A and calcium than do the inner leaves. The outer leaves, finely chopped and serv ed immediately in cole slaw are not only tasty but packed with good nutrition. Mam & Bartlett Sts. 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The researchers also found that tricot knit nylon slips shrink slightly more than woven satin slips. But they pointed out that the draping qualities and greater porosity of tricot knits plus the fact that no ironing is necessary makes them popular with many women. Don't use hot wa'er to remove egg stains from fabric. Soak the stain first in cold water, and then wash. Ye AMAZING la IOOKS UKlUAlHlt... mis urf uathb... ourwiuts uathh ST01 ! j-wat imt mvtiofa Lining and pockets in strong Lag. id. Two vertical .spending pock. Ms. Available in two convonient in- 14 x 11-and IS X 12- $5 00 & up $1.00 Trade-In Allowance On Your Old Case Phone 2-6428 $798 lower Your Overhead, Increase Your Income . . Investigate . . . "The Amazing Volkswagon" ON THIS WORID-FAMOUS SINGLE At ... IENS REFLEX COMBINATION Jk Oj Your Charge Account Invited MORSE MOTORS 1201 N. RIVERSIDE CAMERAS PHOTOGRAPHS 120 East Main St. The ONLY Burelson's in Medford! it PwrriAnt Plan . ' if t n