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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 2, 1956)
0 o O o o- O O O no o o o e o o, o G o o o o o o TWO M3DFOHD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE rrldiy. Korembar I. 1S5S 0-0 O o C o O O O o' O o O Unusual Dinner To Honor Couple At, Shady Cove Shady Cove Mr. and lira. Ralph Watson, who have lived here almost continuously. eince, 1918, wiil be honored at an un usual event Saturday night, No vember 3. The Watsons are cele brating their Sjth wedding an niversary that day, and because Qct their love of nature and the outdoors, their Wo sons and daughters-in-law (re giving a Q dinner in their honor, at whfch "only w!W and native foods will be served. 3 Xhe menu will include baked porcupine, home- smoked fish, venison and bear meat, elk, "-o pheasant, quail and duck, acorn and wild cherry jellies and jams and other delicacies made en tirely or largely from native ma terial. Tie dinner Saturday night, to be held at the home of their son and dau?hter-in-law. " Mr: and CMrs. Carroll Watson, will be for family members and long-time friends. Int addition,' invitations have been issued for an open house Sundar afternoon at the 03 Carroll Watson home. Since the (-couple has asked that no gifts be brought, plans have been made to hang gold foil-wrapped dollar on a gilded anniversary Pathfinder Club Awarded Trophy . Q Kedford Pathfinder club won O tfc third place trophy in com- petition at the fourth annual 0stntao Pathfinder' fair held "in gugsne October 21.. $ O Tfie entire elub attended, in Si) Ccfliding 30 member! and, 10 counselors. The group was led O $rOral W. Tucker, who wa O assisted by Mrs. Pearle Tucker, 0 Mrs. Bernard Thompson, Mrs. cBorothy Gregg, Joe Hoyt and O forest Bigger, deputy directors.' The club competed .in all O events, capturing blue ribbons in fire bUtltling, signalling ana uie displa booth, pius a red ribbon for marching. The winning booth O lid for, ita theme "Missionary Endeavor." In the booth scene were Oral Tueker Jr., Phyllis rGxeKt, Irita and Larry Snyder: O The club competed wun ccSer clubs throughout the state fn Jake thfrd nlace honors. o o " oQ cl2i6ns' Auxiliary , ; ToSponsor Event In; Rogue River Rogue River Bogue River r o liMe' "auxiliary nas planned the 3 O annual fund-raising event for O Saturday, November 3, at the 0Ve Oak Grange hall In Rogue ""River. Hours wi!l be irom 10 5w. to 10 p.m. -JCbazaar and rummage sale wil be held during the day, and aTam -dinner will be served om 5.30 to 8 p.m. Luncheon O wilt be eerved at noon.. ' O (Wrs." Richard DeArmond, sew, rjng chairman of the auxiliary, annouivee that nearly 100 aprons of all types are ready for sale.ras wrell as many other ba zaarCitems. The general chair man, Mrs. Don Stamm, states tjtat Christ mas decorations and gilts. hotEsmiade candy and oth- O er articles will be on sale. , D C , o o o o o o o O 0 G30 O GO o Q o o o o o o Troop and Posse Rtde on Sunday; , Events Planned O Eagle Point Ladies Mounted troops and Jackson County Mounted Sheriff's posse mem bers and other horseback riders met Sunday morning at the W. M. lemmon ranch. Meridian road, for an autumn ride through (Socded hills north of Roxy Ann. The ride was- sponsored by Othe troop and cohostesses. with MrsPLemmon were her daugh ter, Mrs. Cordon Koehler, Jack sonville, ana Airs. Bam f.erm. The group returned to the ranch for lunch. Abnit 10 guets remained for atj-afternoonof canasta when. reflrrshaients in the Halloween :- Z V "An Actress Looks at Amer ica" will be' the title ef aa ad dress to be given for Rogue. Val ley Knife and Fork club Mon day, November S. at Rogue Val ley Country club. The speaker will be Betty Roadman,' Holly wood character actress. Reser Taiiene are to be made with the secretary. Mrs. J. S.-Heathering-lon.11 Black Oak drive. 'no laier than Saturday. November 3. Winfer-Warm! Nothing more welcome as 'a gift, for yourself than smart looking., .toasty-warm mittens! These are simple knit; with a cable stitch round' the wrist for a snug fit. Just ONE ball of sport yarn needed' Pattern 7285; directions for small, medium, large in cluded. Send TWENT.Y-FJVE 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 our ALICE BROOKS Needle craft book . stunning designs for yourself, for - your home lust for you, our readers! Dozens of other designs to order all easy, fasainating hand -work! Send .25 cents for your copy of this wonderful book right away! theme were served.. . Plans now are being made for social activities during the holi day season. Waale Not. Want Not , Ithaca, N. Y.iU.R) Peeling potatoes carefully can save family of four as much as $5.40 a year, a "Cornell University eco nomist says. Professor Lola T. Dugeon says- that's about the amount wasted if 'the potato peeler in the family cuts away too much potato. Tourist Travels "On His Stomach,". Says Restaurateur ' By GAY PAULEY United Press Correspondent ' New York U.Ri Arthur Maisel has. decided that the tourist like the Army, travels on his stomach. - - Maisel operates a restaurant chain, which feeds-many of the millions who annually visit the nation's largest city. "You can spot a tourist by his appetite," said Maisel. "He eats with the same gusto with which he sight-sees." "A tourist starts the day with a big breakfast . . . ham and eggs, the works. A New Yorker grabs a roll and coffee. "Maybe out-of-towners dont eat so heartily all the time . . but when they're here, they're on a holiday. Half the fun is mealtime." "The whole country is sup posed to be waistline conscious, but we 'don't notice it. Every body has dessert . - . apple pie and cheesecake are the top sellers. "About the only concession to diet we notice is that people or der more broiled foods than they used to." Think Of The Dishesl Maisel's restaurants, most of them located in Manhattan, an nually serve about six million meals. In the 14 years he has been operating restaurants, he has learned not only how to spot the tourist but also to locate his home area. "You can tell a lot by the way a person orders meat,'' said TVlaisel. "Southerners like meat well done . . . they want foods fried to a turn, like chicken, shrimp and onions. Easterners like meat rare and prefer it broiled. Westerners like meat so much they order it lor break fast.' "The Midwesterner has all the meat he wants, so he orders things tte can't get back home. Seafoods especially. Real Bafflers "The New Englander, well I've decided a lot of people from that part of the country don't know what a steak is.". Maisel explained it was difficult to spot a New Englander from his toga tastes.. Maisel said there is some con sistency in our national eating patterns. "Everybody likes ham and eggs for breakfast . . . and no two people seem to want the eggs fixed the same way," he said. "Hamburger is the univer sal favorite for lunch. ' "Sounds as if our tastes are in a rut, but people do try out new foods ... a lot of highly spiced meats which began in New .York have become national favorites. And i think we do ap preciate good cooking, regard less ot European propaganda. "The one flaw I see in our eating habits is our tendency to hurry through a meal. We sometimes gulp." ' Rogue Elk Unit Member Speaks On UN Agency Rogue Elk Mrs. Chester Will son, talked on the United Na tions International Children's Emergency Fund at the last meeting of Rogue Elk Home Extenson unit. It was held at the home of Mrs. George Tock stein, with 17 members present. Mrs. Willson, explained that UNICEF is- the world's largest international effort to improve' the health and welfare of chil dren throughout the entire world. Plans were made, to send Christmas gifts of toys, clothing and candy to missions for Indian children in Ganedo, Ariz. A noon luncheon was follow ed by instructions' on the mak ing of sofa cushions. The les son was given by Mrs. Frank Dolenshek and Mrs. Asbjorn Myklebye. ' Cohostesses were Mrs. Henry Schuler, Mrs. Myklebye and Mrs. Tockstein. Easier fo Cut, Sew and Fit m ten US i T-r 9225 14!i-26'i Printed Pattern With our new Printed Pat tern, sewing becomes a pleasure for shorter, fuller figures! This dress assures a perfect fit won derful flattery! See its. graceful skirt; easy tucks that slim the bodice. Printed Pattern 9225. Half Sizes 141&,, I6I2, 18V4, 20V4, 22,i( 24V2, 26'$. Size 16V4 re quires 3',2 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 plainly NAME, ADDRESS with SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Help Yourself to Happiness atadtri arc lMTHei to present their problems. All qaerln. will receive (dividual mttestUoM i i should be aeenmpanied a stamped, self-addressed eavals-pe, directed to MAKV HAIteiS SKIFEKT, M A.. Oopartmant ot Educa Uoa. The AMEEICAN INSTITUTE OF FAMILY EELATIONS. iZtl Sunset Boulevard, Laa Asgele 27, Calilarmia-- piness. Praise, used generously, aids in gaining children's and husband's cooperation in a busy house. "Keep the youngsters busy and make them feel part of the family," urges Mrs. Sin clair. "Encourage them to help even if it means extra effort on mother's part now, for even tually their aid will help mother in lightening her work. Given a chance, it is surprising 'what children can do."' Rainy day activities, labor sav ing devices; eliminating useless effort and motion all these are given an airing at the American Institute of Family Relations in the "Less ' Work, More Fun" hour. At long last, the house wife is finding that work can be made easy and that life, even in a busy household, -can be fun. "Housekeeping seems to be so much work and so little fun," Walls Mrs. Smith. "I scrub my way through the house every week, and by the. next week I have to start over again, right where I was before!" "The hours are terrific," wails Mrs. Jones, "and there seems to be no way to 'get ahead' on the routine. With three active children and a messy husband. I never get any time to rest or to do anything for myself." "I like being a wife," little Mrs. Brown puts in wistfully, "but I miss some of the fun I jised to have before I was caught on my nousewoiK ueduumi. There must be a way, somehow. to have less work and more fun. Somebody, somewhere, someway must know the answer!" Here at the American Insti tute of Family Relations in Los Angeles, we have approached the problem with definite an swers. Mrs. F. Graff Sinclair, herself the mother of five chil dren, end an experienced coun selor, attempts to free the routine-ridden housewife with a course of study entitled "Less Work, More Fun for Homemak ers." A 6-week's course, given for the first time less than a year ago, it endeavors to do what every woman since Eve has longed fo it strives to train the wife to accomplish her work with less effort, thereby freeing her from time-pressure. Mothers of small children are especially "snowed under" with many chores, which they must do and which seem never to be finished. More experienced housewives, too, often settle into a routine ot drudgery which leaves them little time for themselves or fam ily recreation. Less ' work, more fiin frowns upon rigidity of time schedules. Because you have always wash ed on Monday and ironed on Tuesday, says Mrs. Sinclair, is no reason you must continue to do so, if you can gain more free time by shifting the routine or telescoping it. to fit other activi ties. Women are encouraged to do several things at once, to sterilize baby's bottles while waiting for the potatoes to boil, to do the mending while watch ing the roast and supervising Junior's piano practice. Cooking tricks, kitchen shortcuts, clean ing devices, pay big dividends in women's efficiency and hap- f & je r It a f ' e Beauticians Plan Cliriie.on Sunday . Medford and Grants Pass unit3 of the Oregon Beauticians asso ciation are sponsoring a hair styling clinic and instruction session Sunday, November 4. It will be held at Medford Beauty school, corner of Eartlett .and East Main streets, beginning at 10:30 a.m. It is open to all beau ticians' in southern Oregon. Four - members of ' the state hair lashion body will be dem onstrators and instructors. They are R. D. Burks, Eugene, presi dent of the Oregon. Beauticians association; Mrs. Arnetta Moore, Tillamook; Mrs. Louella Million, Klamath Falls and Elmo Bailey, Springfield. ' " Beauticians who wish to lake advantage of the clinic are asked to provide their own mbdel and work, kit for actual practice, or note pad and pencil if they pre fer to observe. All attending are asjeed to take a sack lunch, as work will be continuous all day. The Med ford unit will 'furnish coffee. ' A charge will be .made, it is stated. Guests Leave .Eagle POint Mr. and Mrs. Howard Millis, Myrtle. Point, Ore., left last we'eke end for their home' after visiting for 10 days' with Mr. and. Mrs. W. M. Lemmon, Meridian, rd: Mr. Billis spent the time hunting. o m - X o e a.. . n. err. t-ar- - a" , j 2 W jUVnai " ,, R-". - l,- . sal "3 F W ."f ar. .fc X i si iiim.liiatiiiliiH.WfcM - mitmumMmmm r O JOHN. SNIDER, Now President . of the City Council, Has the ABILITY, the EXPERIENCE and the TIME ! Do A GOOD JOB! o o 3 VOTFOR Go BaO. FOR Pd. Adv. Snider for Mayor Committee To.Buor Sell - Use Tribune Classified Ads O o o o 3 C " O o Co o O O G NEW LOCATION 4 ' OF LARGER- OFFICE . C3n O O q, 29 NORTH IVY STREET o o CI O o Investments made. bv ?he 10th of the t3 montr) earn dividenak . os of the First The steady growth of this long-established Medford in stitution has made necessary this expension in space, facilities and personnel'. It is but another step in a long ' range program of First Federal to keep pace with the. continued development of the southern Oregon area. It means improved service for our investors and mortgage loan clients. We cordially. invite you to drop in and see our new quarters,, just half block north from Main on "Ivy street Yiear the Hotel Medford. pTiwrmaKjj r Savings & Loan. Assn. of Medford 29 Worth Ivy R. F. Kyle, President erV I 1 11 v I I LULI1HL zfrti. 1 1 1 1 1 1 .11111 'A o r. 1'SK'J . o ,0 SEE taw State Senators BOB HOLMES and Elmo Smith COMPARE Slil 1 mm Voted to maintain strong Referen dum the people's best defense qgainst bad tax laws. ' Voted to prevent Union busting, for repeal of Taft-Hartley, for Unem ployment Compensation for all workers. Voted for increase in Teachers' Sal aries; for sick Jeave for-Teachers; for Portland State College. ' Sponsored and voted for all Civil Rights measures to prevent discrirrh nation for reasons of race, color or religion. ' ' Voted for Federal over-oil develop ment of low-Cost Power, against Pelton Dam, against "Partnership"! construction of John Day and car ried one-man successful fight against give-away Interstate Com pact of 1955. Voted for older citizens by oppos ing unfair relative responsibility law. Voted to endorse United Nations. Voted against amendment fo U.' S. Constitution which -would weaken President's powers in making Inter national Agreements.- Voted to support President Eisen hower's Reciprocal Trade Program to promote World Peace. TAXPAYERS'! RIGHTS LABOR EDUCATION CIVIL RIGHTS n voted todstrx the rtitprendum power of the peopfo against unfair ' tax law,. o O n O Voted fo weoJten Ufions. V(S?ed ogainsf resolution falling for repea of TaftrHartly and againit UnemShv- merit Compensation for aiorfcegs. O Voted ogams Teachers ' gJary raise tt against ieJt leave for Teachers against Portland Siaie College. o 0 Was onty $fafe Senator in fjcenf Om- gon history to vote againft, oil three Civil Hights meatur e. o O ccP o o o J POWER SENIOR CITIZENS fOXEIGfi POLICY FOREIGN TRADE A- ' hower s Reciprocal Trade Program ' Vl rPrmote World Peace. : J jftfifeCID THIS IS THE RECORD iZZZ BOB HOLMES IS PROUD' isw-) , rim, rl.m.iaL,'ai J t v o Againsf0Fcfrodrfrvtfopmen)of . A - f 1 -II I . i n-r C? uomi, iponjorea dim rg( onn-wisir q Pelton Dam, favored private vtiifiy O grab of Hells Canyon ogd John Day. (. o r o . 0 o a Voted against older c'rt&tm bf voting for unfair relate responsibility 1hw. 'j O 'ONLY State Senator to vote against ' endorsement, oftlniid Nations; voted to weaker? Presklertt'i treaty mofeng power. 0 o o O n 9, - Voted against resefuthnaendorcmtg President Eisenhower's mciprocoi Trade Program toapromote Wo& Ptaee.. 0 0 O 0 o THIS. IS THE RECORCP OF 8 Q ELMO SITHHOPuSEo TO DEFEND OR DISCUSS . ' HIS RECORD f o 0 THE RECORIXoSHOWSL olmei Two Stale Senfiors of the tame eg, the number ef terms in the Senate. . . . Bob H uppeuing Progreiin taucation, tonservationr Labor, Old-Age AjsHtance and Welfar, Civil Rights and International Affoits His opponent? by conlrast, Baclcward, Reactionary, lolalioniJr Q BOS HOLMES WAS JELECf fff CITIZEN OF THE YEAR by OREGON TEACrRS IN 1953 a O . es o o Pd. AdV Jackwn Co. D-motrarie Central CsmmM. Larry SheftarCCViiIrmm o o o oo0 o o