Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, December 31, 1956, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    O O
O OO o o
o
O O o
O
o
O O
o o
O
o O
o o
O
o
o
o
o,
oO 0
OO
O
o
G
O
o
W5-(r8rOS (Cf30) MAIL TP.I8U;
o o
Q .
oHltT
0hyfch. Presents Program
By MM. U. . AVIN
Hiltsg-The Community Bible
chitth presented a Christmas
program afc the ening service
on Sugdify. Dec. g3. o
TiJ5 progfsr included "Tlte
Sr f Bethlehem" by Joyce
Jcnson, Paula Eastman and
Barbara De cClerck and songs,
"Away irja Maoger. and "Silent
NigPt" by Paul Eastman. Bar
baras and Carleen De Glerck,
D Jce Johnson, Marilyn Thomp
ion arfH Janet Cavin. "The
Gifts," a recitation, was gives
y Jan Smith, as well as a play
o' by Pat Fox, Marcia Cavin,
Nancy Johnson and Janet Ben
son. solo vas sung by Mrs.
erry Johnson.
oftig a short message by the
!j)ev. (ohn Shaw, bags of candy,
nuts fnffruit were presented to
those present.
Those attending ihe Christmas
O oPartv ' ,ne Music oclub nelcI
SarurciHy at the home of Mrs.
nPauI Green, In Hornbrook, were
MarciaCavin, PauLa Eastman,
Janet Cayjn, Bobby. Laustalot,
Jugith Fremd, Bafbara and Car
leen Clerck. A small gift was
psented to each member. R
freshments of cookies and soft
drinks fcre served.
O m0
Mr. argi Mrs. Charles Shaw,
Auburn, called at the home
of igictor Van fie Weghe one
(BttC'Ust week.o Shaw was cm
played by Fruit Growers Supply
,jompany0several years ago.
Cjlr. ajftl Mrs. Carjos Goddard
q of Lone Beach, spent the holi
days with Mfs. Goddard's par
ents. Mr. and Mrs. William
Roish. o
J o
Mi."H Sandra I21ewjlyn of Cen
tal Pntwas a week end guest
of Miss Judith Rife,
) o x .
O Mi" i'-iY Sarbera of Red
dingQ arrived Friday, night to
spend a few days with her fa
(tjier. John B&bajra. On Monftay
night Judyoann ner tatner drove
to Redding to spend Christmas
with Mrs5. Barbera, Deanna and
(Pauline.
O Dinner gueSts Qhristmas .(Jay
at) the 1$? M? Cavin hotne were
Mr. Lavin s parents, ivir.. ana
Mrs. Fred Cagin of Horobrook.
jff.a?dor?0 H. jt. Thompson
nd daughter Jlarilyn were din-(-nepguests.oCririttnias
day, of
Mto Stid Mrs. Tci Bradley of
o (Medford. o
o a e-
Tony farin drove to Meford
Christmft nigh to pSgy his ac
cordioi at a Christmas party
held at Mon Desir.
Mr. affd Mrs. Al Slmmen and
family left Saturday morning
for San Rmon, Galif., to spend
the Christmas holiday with his
parents, Mr. ana Mrs. A. D. Sim
men. They returned Borne Wed
nesday. Mr. and Mrs. Eisner Bra goo
and family were hosts to the
Dave Rastall 0Smily and the
Louis Oakley family on Christ
mas day. Mre Coleman. Mrs.
Dragoo's mother of Cfntral
Point, was aso present.
Mm and JL's.
Grady Bonner
,-jina son Mark, spent the holi
days with relatives in the Bay
area. o
o
Holitlaj9 guests" at the T.- D.
KillSgsworth aiome were" Mr.
and Mrs? Ward Part of Stock-
ton.QlJB. Bill Sherman of Yreka.
Mr. and ttrs. Sill Thomas of
Yreka, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Alfoni nd family of A'hlasd,
nlSs Fern Vinson nd Mrs. W.'
J. c$gat of Redding and Mrs.
omi Oscns of Richmond.
Thursday. KillinEs-orth
" ....
Vinson to Redding. Mrs. Taggart
,9 i. viiSncni-nrtlv. mother nH
PIiss Aftns&n is his nce.
P, Mr. and Mrso Gino Michelson ! severely scparted worlds of clas
aesrl fargily ofoWeed were holi-jsic ballet. Spanish and modern
day guesrS of Mr. and Mrs. John
Michelsog.
.Ir. and Ms. Dick Richman
e&ftcott vfiley ap9 Mr. James of
, Yreka callere a the J. R- Smith
hne on Monday.
Ir. and QMrs. Fred Haynes
b? to Redmg on Sunday to
sperir) ristiSas at the home
of theifson, Fedie Jr., and his
famOy. 0
GMr. and Ms. J. E. Jones of
Redding cai:d on friends here
0S3 Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Chase
Oir5 famay drove Radding
Saturday 8 rryirning. returning
home$te ;und night.
o
5 0 M. and Mrs. Orvil Green and
,daughser Jeri Lynn, left Sun
day to spend th Cirist.as hci
rla wh Mrs. Gren's brother
R. V. Simms. and family, i
Gue rncfville.
Ctilif. They re
turned home Tuesday nijht.
r. and Mi. Cecil Rose ieft
Thursday tnr Seattle, where
q they will make their home. Rose
has" beeft n ill health for the
paiis several moijths and plans
3o"sv-3?r the hospital Rire.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Ros and
family had 5ers- Stuart Tsylar
i
of Yreka as dinner guest on i
Christmas day. Mrs. Taylor is :
Mrs. Rose's mother. j
Cuests for Christmas dinner
at the home of Mr. and Mm. Joe.
Vieira were their daughter and
family, Mr.' and Mrs. David Sage
and sons David and Bobby Joe.
Their son and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Vieira and daugh
ter Sharon and Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Rose were also there.
Mr. and Mrs. Marion Lee Rose
of Tennessee visited last week
with his father, Mr. and Mrs.
Cecil Rose. They also called at
the homes of other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Jones of
Redding and son Lloyd of San
Diego, spent the Christmas holi
days at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Jones.
The roof of the Dudley Kil
lingsworth home caught fire
Wednesday afternoon. Damage
was kept to a minimum by mem
bers of the volunteer fire depart
ment. Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Cavin and
daughter Janet, spent Christmas
clay at the home of Mrs. Fred
Bloomingcamp in Hornbrook.
Mrs. H. R. Thompson and
daughter Marilyn left Wednes
day night by Greyhound bus
for Sacramento and Auburn to
visit relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Carol Davenport
srrd daughter had as their holi
day guest Mrs. Davenport's
mother of Grenada.
An early Christmas was ob
served at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Graves with their
three daughters and their fam
ilies thre for the occasion. Seat
ed at the dinner table were Mr.
and Mrs. Philip York and son,
of Ono, Calif., Mr. and Mrs.
Bob DeAvilla and son Billy and
daughter Sharon and Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Jorgenson and daugh
ter Debbie, all of Yreka. Christ
mas day, Mr. and Mrs. Graves
were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
DeAvilla and family in Yreka.
Mr. and Mrs. Philip York and
son returned to Ono Monday
morning.
Mrs: Henry De Clerck." who
underwent surgery a month ego
frt the Sacred Heart hospital in
Medford, returned to her home
Saturday.
Couple Returns
To Santa Barbara;
Luncheon Given
Mr. and Mrs. George Grglch
left yesterday for their home
in Santa Barbara after spending
the holidays here with Mrs.
Grgich's parents. Dr. and Mrs.
C. I. Drummond, Ross lane.
Mrs. Grgich, the former Susan
Drummond. is a teacher of the
second grade in Santa Barbara
public? schools.
Saturday afternoon Mrs.
Grgich was honored at a lunch
eon at Rogue Valley Country
club given by Mrs. E. B. Hanley
and Mrs. Hanley Heffernan.
Also home for the holidays
is the Drummond's son, David,
freshman at the University of
Oregon. He is a pledge of Sigma
Phi Epsilon fraternity.
Dancer to Give
Firsrt Program
For Civic Music
Firnt of the annual program
series of Jackson County Civic
Music association will be pre
sented Thursday, January 10, in
Medford, Senior High school au
ditorium. Appearing will be Irene Haw
thorne, premiere danseuse of the
; i, r t "j""1""'
! Miss Hawthorne, billed as a one-
j wuindii utiiiLc ittini, is saici lo oe
i equally at home in the usually
expression dances.
Miss Hawthorne is
San Francisco.
a native of
Mrjffats to Leave
For Home Tuesday
Vr. and Mrs. John P. Moffat
Jr.. and small son. Peter Wil
liam, will leave tomorrow for
their l;Sme in Altadena. Calif.,
after spending the holidays here
with Mr. Moffat's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. John P. Moffat, 34
North Berkeley way.
Mrs. Moffat's parents. Mr. and
Mrs. Robert A. Pitts, came down
from Portland to spend Christ
mas with their sr:i-in-law and
daughter and ;he senior-Mof-fats.
OPEN NEW YEAR'S TILL MIDNIGHT
SAVE Sg)
unu;
nun
3-4462
HHHH
urn
Kondty. December 31, 1J5S
j Chinese Pagoda
I Entirely of Jade
To Be Unveiled
, Eugene Unveiling of a $75,
000 Chinese pagoda at a special
i ceremony Sunday, Januarv 6.
will open the university's 1957
Festival of Arts.
The nine-foot carving, made
entirely of jade, is the largest
and costliest of the Chinese Im
perial pagodas in existence. It
was given to the university by
an anonymous donor and will
be shown for the first time at
the unveiling.
Ordered made by the Emperor
K'ank Hai in 1706, the pagoda
was meant as a votive offering
to gain admittance to Buddist
heaven for the Emperor's newly
born grandson. Miniature jade
images of seated Buddhas are
carved in the niches of the first
story, and gilded images of the
founder of the religion are set
into the niches of the succeed
in stories.
"East meets West" is the
theme of the university festival.
It will be held from January 6
through March 25. Included
among the events are special ex
hibits from Japan, lectures, stage
productions, and many other
special shows.
The opening exhibition will
be of secret relics of Japanese
Christian art. Succeeding shows
will include one of Japanese ink
painting and calligraphy, one of
contemporary Japanese oil paint
ings and sculptures, and one of
the art of Japanese gardens.
Winter Lingerie
Has Spring Tone
By United Press
Flannel has become almost a
forbidden term for winter linge
rie. The word is cotton, say linge
rie designers of St. Louis Fashion
Creators, Inc.
Not ordinary cotton, but the
"aristocrat" produced from cot
ton and the synthetic ''miracle"
fabrics.
Designers are gleeful about the
static-free, shrink-proof, no-iron
labels on the new fabrics. They
give the impression the house
wife actually will find time to
lounge in some of their designs.
Gone are the frills and fluff
of lounge-wear of the past.
So designers have named one
mint-green and candy-pink style
the "spring daisy." Ribbons are
used sparingly for decorations.
Instead a daisy design is ap
pliqued on the material.
Desisners say lingerie styles
don't change a great deal but
they confess the "ivy league"
look has affected the pa.iama set,
and not with a belt in the back.
It's done with buttons and tabs
a button on the back of the col
lar and buttoned tabs on the
sides of paiama tops.
For the teen-age set, the latest
fad is fur-rimmed glasses. A
product of a Paris manufacturer,
the glasses can match a coat in
tiger or ocelot, or even the new
fur bonnets worn cossack style.
"Spring hat note: The New
York firm of John-Frederics be
lieves "more hat" will go right
into spring, 1957. Both width
and height are stressed in the
firm's new collection. Mr. Fred,
the designer, features gold as
one of the top shades for spring.
Benders Leave
After Stay Here
Mr. and Mrs. N. B. Bender
Jr., left last week for a trip
south after spending the holi
days in Medford with Mr. Bend
er's parents. Mr. and Mrs. N. B.
Bender, Westerlund drive, and
Mrs. Bender's parents. Dr. and
Mrs. Dwight Findley, Old Stage
road.
The trip south, a combined
business and vacation event,
took the Benders to San Fran
cisco first and they planned to
spend New Year's eve in that
city. After stops in Las Vegas
and Reno, the couple will vaca
tion at El Rancho Santa Fe, near
San Diego, and later plan to
travel into Mexico.
NO LICENSE
Fitchburg. Mass. 'U.R' Adam
Lavenski, 34, was fined $150
in district court for driving with
out a license, then fined an addi
tional $50 when police discover
ed his license had been revoked
15 years ago.
CALENDAR
Calendar attlcea and newi for
ttie society section of The Mali
Tribuna must be- submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
dav edi'jon is 1 Dm Friday Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 0
a m of the day of publication and
for week da news ij 5 pjn. the
day before publication.
Monday:
8:30 p.m. Kershaw Square
dance. Kershaw Squsre.
OK
?
fcT
MARKET
1202 NortH Kr.eriJe
OPEN EVERY
NIGHT TIL
MIDNIGHT Vf
V
r
Challenge of
Women Throughout World
By MARY PRIME
United Press Correspondent
New York (U.R) The year
1956 tested the mettle of the
world . . . and of women. And
women met the challenge.
They fought side by side with
men for freedom in Hungary:
they rose to new leadership in
government and politics; they
died with courage.
Women met the test of Leap
Year. too. They took a prince,
a playwright, a singer, a gov
ernor off the list of eligible
bachelors.
They met the tragedies of a
sinking ocean liner and children
kidnaped, the problems of record-high
living costs, the contro
versy over racial segregation.
First, look at the women who
drew the respect, prayers and
tears of the world the women
of Hungary.
They fought against impossi
ble odds, trying to free their
country from Soviet rule. Moth
ers and young girls'battled Rus
sian tanks and guns, led gangs to
blow up armored cars with
"Molotov cocktails."
Women Mobilized
Between sieges, the women
again became housewives. They
ignored Soviet tanks to'lay flow
ers on the tomb of Hungary s
unknown soldier a gesture of
defiance against the Russians
and a tribute to those who died
in the rebellion.
In the Middle East, women
were mobilized when Israel,
France and Britain attacked
Egypt, but returned home when
the United Nations stepped in.
Less military-minded women
turned to the battle of Leap
Year. Love didn't conquer all
the bachelors, but many of the
famous were caught.
The most publicized match
was the tairy tale romance ot
a prince and a beautiful Ameri
can movie star.
Grace Kelly met Prince Rai
nier of Monaco while she was
making a film on the Riviera in
1954. Late in 1955. Rainier visit
ed the United States, told news
men his dream girl was "gentle,
with soft blue eyes and tawny
hair" just like Grace. But the
engagement came as a surprise
when the palace in Monte Carlo
announced it January 5. The
Philadelphia-born girl on April
19, repeated the ancient vows
which made her "Her Serene
Highness, the Princess of Mon
aco," holder of 140 titles.
Margaret Truman Wed
Other wedding bells rang this
year. Margaret Truman, daugh
ter of the former president, was
married to New York newsman
Clifton Daniel. Marilyn Monroe
married playwright Arthur Mill
er. The "Angel of Dien Bien
Phu" Genevieve de Galard
Terraube married a paratroop
captain she had met on the Indo
china battle field.
Other weddings: New York
millionaire William Zeckendorf
and Guri Lie, daughter of Trygve
Lie, former United Nations sec
retary general; singer Julius La
Rosa and secretary Rosemary
Meyer; television star Dave Gar
roway and Pamela Wilde: heiress
Gloria Vanderbilt and TV direc
tor Sidney Lumet. Actress Dana
Wynter to lawyer Greg Bautzer;
and actress Terry Moore to in
surance broker Eugene McGrath.
Movieland marriages also end
ed. Divorced were Jeanne Crain
and Paul Brinkman; comedienne
Martha Rave and her fifth hus
band, Edward Begley. Actress
Elizabeth Taylor, who separated
from Michael Wilding and
planned to marry producer Mike
Todd.
Gov. Robert Meyner of New
Jersey became engaged to Helen
Stevenson, cousin of Adlai Ste
venson. ,
Mrs. Luce Resigned
Women rose to new positions
in government in 1956. A former
Milwaukee school teacher. Mrs.
Golda Meir. became the Israeli
foreign minister. American wom
en tied a congressional record,
when 15 ladies were elected to
the House.
The year also meant at least
a temporary end to a diplomatic
career for Clare Boothe Luce,
U.S. ambassador to Italy. She
resigned in November because
of illness. The year saw Au
therine Lucy, 26, become the
first Negro student to enter the
University of Alabama.
In the Olympics, Mildred Mc
Daniel. 23, of Atlanta, Ga., set
a world record by jumping her
height, five-feet-nine and one
quarter inches. Mrs. Patricia Mc
Cormick, a wife and mother from
each
1956 Met By
Lakewood. Calif., became the
only diver in history to win both
diving events in two straight
contests.
A Soviet athlete, discus throw
er Nina Ponomareva. was fined
for stealing five cheap hats from
a London department store.
The darker days of '56 brought
personal tragedy to parents of
32 -day -old Peter Weinberger,
kidnaped from his Westbury,
N.Y. home, and Cynthia Ruotolo,
kidnaped in Hamden, Conn.
The Babe Died
More heartbreak came to fam
ilies of those who died when
the Italian liner Andrea Doria
sank after colliding with the
Swedish liner Stockholm in July.
The nation's greatest woman
athlete. Babe Didrikson Zahari
as. lost her three-year fight
against cancer.
Death also took Elsie Janis,
sweetheart of the AEF in World
War I; Irene Curie, daughter of
Marie Curie; Mistinguett, French
music hall queen with the "mil
lion-dollar legs;" and designer
Hattie Carnegie.
Both the birth rate and the
marriage rate were up in 1956.
The death rate was about the
same. There were fewer di
vorces. The nation reported a drop in
polio cases fewer than 15,000
cases in November, compared
with 28,000 the same time last
year.
Cost of living hit an all-time
high, but take-home pay and
employment also reached record
levels.
And the gals copied the fash
ions set by Broadway's most
popular style-setter ... a woman,
of course "My Fair Lady."
New Homes Said
Strictly for Birds
Rochester, N.Y. (U.R) More
and more women are making
their homes strictly for the birds
parakeets that is for unusual
decorating touches.
French's Pet Bird Institute re
ports there are 14,000.000 para
keets in the nation, and many
homemakers are feathering their
nests to match the birds.
For instance, television star
Faye Emerson has a yellow-green
parakeet to match her apple
green kitchen walls.
A New York decorator, Fran
ces Lee, keeps her parakeets
in a five-by-seven foot cage on
a wall between two windows in
her recreation room. She design
ed the cage to match the style
of her furniture and chose the
birds to fit into the color scheme.
Parakeets come in shades from
chartreuse to cobalt, and even
purple. There also are cream
colored birds with pink eyes,
others in combinations of black
and white.
To meet the parakeet boom,
cage manufacturers have come
up with bird houses in almost
every imaginable design and col
or. For modern homes, there
are wrought iron cages trimmed
with copper and brass in starkly
simple designs. For rooms with
oriental motifs, there are circular
and peaked cages. Many are tra
ditional. And others are fragile,
pastel cages for ultra-feminine
bedrooms.
EASY MAIN-DI5H
New York (IT., An easy-to-fix
main dish uses canned corned
beef as a base.
In a saucepan heat a can of
cream of celery soup, a can of
crumbled corned beef hash, and
2 teaspoons of horseradish. Add
a little milk until the cream
sauce is the right consistency.
Spoon the hot corned beef sauce
over tossed corn bread squares
with enriched corn meal or your
favorite corn bread mix.
Garnish each plate with sprigs
of parsley and serve with a
cooked green vegetable and an
easy dresser such as ice cream
and cookies.
ROAST'S BEST FRIEND
New York (U.R) Next time
pork roast is on the menu, serve
baked acorn squash halves with
it. Bake the squash halves until
they're tender. Brush the insides
with butter and brown sugar,
fill with tart applesauce and dot
with red jelly. Return to the
oven just long enough to heat
through.
4
A square of cork wallboard
in the laundry center is handy
for thumb-tacking directions for
use and care of laundry methods,
hanging a pair of scissors, meas
urements of soaps and softeners,
or sizes for reshaping garments.
ries
a local industry, satisfying local
appetites for the past 30 years
M m J A
V V
Ij" STARRING
ANQ
charl.es farrell
TUESDAY at 5:30 p.m. KBES-TV
Heady Glamour
1
I
- . V;'
4
Crochet's the fashion! And
these little glamour hats the
smartest shapes of the season.
Every single crochet and rib
stitch; sparkling sequin trim!
Pattern 7077: Crochet direc
tions for two hats quick to do,
using straw yarn or knotting
worsted.
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 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 wonderful book right away!
Easier to Cut,
Sew and Fit
30-42
Our new printed Pattern-sew-EASY!
See the diagram even
a beginner can make this jacket
in piffy time. Graceful flowing
lines, "go everywhere" style
perfect for wool, lineji, pique.
Printed Pattern 9144: Misses'
Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32,
34. 36. 38, 40, 42. Size 16 re
quires 23s yards 5.4-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 eatfh pattern for 1st
class mailing. Send to Marian
Martin, care of Medford Mail
Tribune, Pattern Dept., 232 TFest
18th St., New York. 11, N. Y.
Print plainly NAME. ADDRESS
with SIZE and STYLE NUM
BER. KOTI-TV
7 f QUALITY:: 4j
XV I V I 9 ?I We go a I-o-n-g tty
- I 1 :I waytobesiir oQ O J og
(j' iiiihi ii m your clothes are so 0 M
j$ I B ft dean they'll o P3 if
PS ?tVwl J It look like new
f ry y' I T 1 3 again- Try us c o
VJ if V CO oWo0
Printed Pattern f ; -.V . . -Jo if
Poison OakU'Aulymn Beauty;,
Should Be Admired at Distance
By AL HOB ART
The hot.niste call it Rhus.di-
,-,-.-iir,u. cm ,. u it 'of
by various names that don x look
well in print or sound dignified
to sensitive ears. All of us vould
do well to become acquainted
with it and know it by its con-P
mon ntme Poison Oak an to
accord it- the respect that it de
mands of us. '
To many tha name Poison Oak
conjures . up dread visions of
rattlesnakes, tijers and torture
chambers: to some it means pain
ful, unsightly and swollen fea
tures, great sores on face and
hands, or at least annoying itchy
blisters.
For most of the year we har
bor only ill-will for this pretly
little shrub and avoid it. wisely,
as wt would the plague. Only
in the autumn, when it abandons
its ugly-duckling role nd ac:
quires more the attractiveness of
the sw-an, do we realize) that it
not just the common nuisance
we thought. It emerges st this
time of year as one of the leaders
in Autumn's colorful festival,
and its beautiful red leaves,H
which persist even into winter,
never fail to attract, our admir
ing attention.
Its esthetic value as one of
Autumn's leading beauties com
pensates in large part for its
independent and often vicious
hands-off attitude toward us dur
ing most of . the year, but we
must not be so carried away by
its Fali glamor that we enthu
siastically gather its beautiful
foliage into our arms. .Too great
familiarity with' this gaihbe
decked little charmer could
mean painful disaster, as many a
veteran wlldplant enthusiast can
testify.
Vine or Shrub
Poison Oak growing in the
open
a stenaer. orten many-,
stemmed shrub; where it finds
support, as against a cliff or tree
trunk, it climbs as a vine to
considerable height. In our area
be seen along the roads and high-
ways as well as in the hills and
alonff the streams.
If you're not sure about Poison
Oak's identity a pretty good rule
Free Psrking-Right at th
601 E. Main St.
m
o
toremember is "fcallets three;)
Ufit it be:" The compound leaves
this Dlant tiStays have thVee
Uaflets that look sftnewhatike
oak reaves. T&is fjrst-glince Q (
semblanceo explains the "oaE-' Q
pari OI tils uauit; n uu it w
tion to the true oak. In the sum-
, v. n - ,,
mer it nas ciusierso oi Miiau
greenish flowers, which ls?r.
produce small whitish berries.
The juice of the plant coiHaos
a highly irritating oily substanP
anS when this comes incejntact
with 'human kin some feariil
thing can happen, ttrpending off
the sensitivity of th? skin'sQownO
er. o
You rtiight cometjn contact C
with th poison by toughinf 0
p4ant or touching something that
has already been conlaminate'd
by it, or eenofrom0 thej sfftoke
from the burning brush. Some M
of us are apparently iinrnune !
ihe poison, but let's not feel tooQ j
smug because of our superior
power of resistance after yeais
of immunity vf. may suddenly
acquire sensitivity to the prison,
and find Durselves tlSe vd-faeed J
victims of the fiendiji little
joker.
Is Oak ar Ivf
. Poison Oak i the Ptftson ?Vy
of the Weft. ,W see it alittog3 o
everywhere leafv little sarnies
a few inches high or Bp to 6 feSs D
or more, of as climbing Tjne
up to 49 or 5fj feet long. In the
fall the tinyshrvft)S e!Kffilly,
with their attractive) solid-rail
folnae
Viairo an irrocictiWIo
cination for the ttds, whosfc pe-
tween the fingers, later3ells) tliS
familiar aiyiual qstory.
So long as we rnust accept eg O
existence with this beautiful but n
treacherous little wildie, 'ae
wisest course isoto be always O
aware of oue relationship with
it. to enjoy to the full its rich
seasonal offering, but ta it
in an appropriately" chastenco
maipner aric fi'm a respectful
distance!
New Yofk .U.R) An ea9y
hors d'oeuvre is stuffed ccWry
j stalks. Try m filling made vth
rmashed avj?cadowhich has be,en
seasoned- to taste andrSixed with
finlev chopped pickled onions.
-Door! W$ BtLIVPKfc
n art n
rxone A-ni jr f
zz o
, V ALlCONf oo,o 0 Q
: ft o LAe-flew0 o o H r,
W color t.luura 0 ?i
j Rsyivrp o if0 9
I We feature o 0 fl
' f f finish or S 0 o 0 &f
f dresses. Soft- ,
SctXfm o o o Q o O 0 Jl .
O
o
oO
O
o:
. o ou 6 7
.' 0 o o
o ' O O