F . -a
APPEARING AT FASHION CONGRESS in Moscow, these
models are demonstrating latest Iron Curtain styles. From
left: Poland, Hungary, East Germany, Bulgaria. All
wear silk evening gowns. (International Soundpholo)
Coffee Coated Pecans
Good Accompaniment
New York iUi Coffee-coated
pecans help solve the problem
of what to serve as a beverage
accompaniment at parties.
To make, combine 1 cup of
sugar, 'i cup of water and I
tablespoon of instant coffee in a
saucepan. Cook over low heat,
stirring constantly'until the mix
ture comes to a boil. Continue
cooking until a drop forms a ball
when dropped in cold water.
Pour the hot syrup slowly on the
contents of 2 cans (1 cup size) pe
cans and stir until the nuts
Meal Sandwich
Whole-m e a 1 sandwiches are
quickies for lunch. Cheese is a
sandwich favorite that combines
with so many foods for interest
ing combinations. Try this triple
decker open-face. Toast one side
of bread. Spread untoasted side
with butter. Add a spoonful of
baked beans, cover with a slice
of Cheddar cheese and top with
Bermuda or sweet onion sliced
thin. Place the sandwich under
the broiler until the cheese
melts.
are coated evenly. Place on a
rack to dry.
Firsts Seem To Come
Easy for Cow-Belles'
New National President
Sutherland, Neb. UP Scor
ing "firsts" seems to come easy
for Mrs. M. E. Trego, Sutherland
ranchhwife, new president of
the national Cow-Belles.
She was the first president of
the Nebraska group, organized
in 1948.
The Club is the woman's aux
iliary of tlje Stockgrowers Asso
ciation, and assists cattlemen in
promoting the beef industry.
Primarily, it supplies the house
wife wth information on beef
cookery.
Mrs. Trego will make appear
ances on radio, television, at lo
cal meetings, state and county
fairs, and other affairs. The
Cow-Belles are organized in 23
states.
She attended the first meet
ing of the Cow-Belle organiza
tion in Nebraska in 1948, and
was chosen jts first president.
She was a charter member of the
national Cow-Belles in 1952,
held vice-presidential posts since
1954, and became the first Ne
braskan to hold the national
presidency.
Her traveling during the year
means her husband will be
working their 7,000-acre ranch
alone. The ranch supports about
700 head of cattle and is in the
heart of Nebraska's wheat land,
in the southwestern portion of
the state.
She said her husband is not
fond of the idea that she will
spend a lot of time away from
the ranch, but feels "It's all
right for a year."
For an Italian dish try Scallops Marinera for a hearty
meal. Cook 2 medium onions thinly sliced, and 1 garlic in
lA cup olive or salad oil for five minutes; do not brown:
remove the garlic Add 1 pound can of tomatoes and 1 8
ounce can of tomato sauce; simmer 1 hour. Add Vi tea
spoon basil, h teaspoon oregano, 2 anchovy fillets-diced, 1
teaspoon sugar, and 1 pound sea scallops quartered. Simmer
10 minutes longer. Season io taste with salt and pepper.
Serve on hot cooked spaghetti (1 8-ounce package of the thin
spaghetti) with grated Parmesan cheese. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
Ball erinas in Enviable Position
As Artists in Strict Russia
TTt MEDFORD
Get first pick now!
.Use PenneyTs Ea$yPsy
Lay-Away at no extra cost!
All wool "Lustrasa" plush
rayon taffeta with milium
lining, folded panel back.
Push up sleeves. Colorsi
beige, grey, blue. Sizes 8
to 18.
29.95
Removable angora collar
on polished black alpaca.
Woven wool interlining.
8 to 18.
39.95
All wool luxury plush
with fashionable blouson
back. Push up sleeves.
Beige, red, purple. Rayon
satin with milium lining.
Sizes 10 to 18.
39.95
First Fall
. .just I
; i
i :' : . .-r--. . .
Penney's shopped over 175 Top Makers to bring you these
great new values... designers prize silhouettes in the newest fabrics
from top mills!
See the results of months of market work today!... See the
results of Penney's high standards in expert tailoring, fine construc
tion plus the very latest styles and excellent fabrics !
look Into the terrific advantage Penney's Lay-Away gives you
(. . . first selection, easy payments, no extra costs . . . and your new
coat ready when you want it !
Whether you wear a misses, 'junior or half-size, SHOP
PENNEY'S FIRST FALL COAT EVENT... YOU CANT
AFFORD NOT TO!
By COLETTE BLACKMORE
United Press Correspondent
Moscow OP) To be a Rus
sian ballerina is like reaching
for the moon, sun and stars and
capturing all in one swoop. In
the entire Soviet, there is no one
whose popularity shines bright
ei and whose position is so un-
shakeable as that of the danc
ing prima donna.
From trembling debut to tri
umphal acclaim she is worship
ped by every Soviet man for her
slim grace, and envied by most
Soviet women for the same rea
son. Hers is the privilege of living
in a decent apartment, making
exciting acquaintances, travel
ing abroad, and being able to
obtain and wear chic clothes.
But there is another side to
her story. The ballerina's lot
also is one of long and disci
plined study. It begins when she
about 10, in an inconspicuous
unglamorous classroom per
haps in the Moscow Ballet
school, less than five minutes
walk from the Kremlin.
Classic Touch
In the old, yellow-wall build
ings clustered around a court
yard, the purity of Russian class
ic ballet is guarded fiercely and
its principles transmitted from
generation to generation. Here
more than 100 girls are striving
to be ballerinas. They won't all
make the grade. But one of them
18-year-old Katya Maximova has
a mighty good chance.
Katya, short for Ekaterina
(Catherine) is in the eighth and
next to last ' year at the ballet
school. She is rated the best
dancer in her class, and one of
the most promising pupils in the
school.
Kayta is small, delicately
built, with a pale oval face, and
black hair wrapped in braids at
the back of her head. She joined
Moscow's only professional bal
let school in 1949, with some 25
other girls and boys who were
selected from hundreds of ap
plicants. Whale Meat Solution
To Butchers' Bills
La Jolla, Calif. OPl Amer
ican housewives could save on
their meat budgets if whale meat
were made available, says one
ot the nation's authorities on the
subject.
Dr. Raymond M. Gilmore of
the Scripps Institution of Ocean
ography, said it is "shameful"
that whale meat is now used
as dog food instead of for human
consumption.
"I see no reason why whale
meat should not be -old as low
budget beef," said Gilmore. "It
should sell for about 50 cents a
pound.
Whale meat is red like beef,
tender as veal and loaded with
protein. It has no waste, no fat
no bones or gristle."
Gilmore said he frequently has
whale steaks three times a day
when at a whaling station.
Fruit
Golden canned cling peach
halves, fresh pineapple spears
sprinkled with chopped mint
leaves, avocado crescents and
whole unstemmed strawberries
make a colorful fruit arrange
ment to serve with cottage
cheese balls rolled in chopped
walnuts. Dip the drained
peaches and sliced avocado into
fresh lime or lemon juice for
extra flavor and to keep the
avocado from darkening.
Leftover rolls toasted with a
topping of cheese go well with
soups and salads.
Don't Say
"Hello"
Say - - -
"FILTER-FLO"
The chosen children immedi
ately were plunged into one of
the most strenuous programs in
the entire Soviet educational
system. For nine years, they
spent an average of five to six
hours a day learning to dance;
while devoting just as many
hours to academic subjects such
as mathematics, history, and
science.
In their second year, the chil
dren begin to take part in pub
lic performances at the Bolshoi,
Moscow's famed theater of the
dance.
Visitors to the ballet school,
find its lithesome pupils a start
ling contrast to the husicy, well
padded girls who stride the
streets outside. They conclude
that ballerinas must have a spec
ial diet in which bread and sour
cream pancakes are replaced by
meat, eggs and vegetables.
But Katya said the usual Sov
iet meals are served to ballet
students.
"I eat a terrific lot," she said.
"The only way we keep thin is
by dancing all the time."
Space Savings Notions
Of Americans Reduce
Home Furniture Needs
Chicago IIP) The American
craze for - space-saving devices
soon may do away with a lot
of furniture.
Exhibits at the summer home
furnishings market showed that
versatile space-saving dividers
not only are sweeping the na
tion they're sweeping some
furniture right out of the home.
One of these devices, designed
by Henry P. Glass, combines
within its trim dimensions an
apartment's complete dining
needs, plus space for clothes,
china and books, and for dis
playing decorative accessories.
Even the dining table and its
four chairs can be filed out of
sight in a unit that is only seven
feet long, six feet high and 22
inches deep.
There are hidden 48-inch tall
"clothes files" which pull out
on concealed wheels to put a
whole wardrobe in view.
Made of individual compon
ents that fit tightly together, a
space solver can be assembled
with all the units facing one
way along a wall, for use as a
room divider, or with a bed,
chair, ironing board, stove, or
bathtub opening out on ,one
side.
For a
t Wonderful ft
Summer! S
Make this tfie summer in which
you and your family learn to play
tht
Hammond Organ
It's easy, and brings great satis
faction and pleasure into your
home. Come in and try it!
MODEL $1385
Complete with 6 Waeks
FREE LESSONS!
PURUCKER
PIANO HOUSE
111 No. Central Ph. SP 2-5702
Sunday, July 21, 1957
MEDFORD (OREGON) MAIL TRIBUNE SEVEN
Ironing Board Gets
Change in Design
After Over 90 Years
Chicago OP The ironing
board, one of America's oldest
household articles, has under
gone its first major design
change in more than 90 years.
Arvin Industries, Inc., which
introduced the new style board
at the American Furniture
Mart's summer show, describes
it as having a straight front edge
and an arc-shaped back edge.
The standard shape is symmet
rical, broad at one end and nar
row at the other.
This pattern has been used
since 1867, when the first pat
ents for ironing boards were
issued.
The manufacturers say the
new board provides about 28
per cent more surface area and
has a maximum width of 18 in
ches, as compared with 15 inches
as compared with 15 inches for
most boards.
It's hot outside but you'll
always look perky and cool
with one of our Easy-to-care for
PERMANENTS!
(Easy en your purse, too)
38 Students to Serve You
Medford Beauty School
Phone SP 2-6155 235 East Main
'MEDFORD'
DEfflEY'S
Come One
Come All!
Monday Is Bargain Day at Penney's. Read this Ad
and you will know what we mean. Hundreds of
other reductions not advertised! Come See!
BAMBOO SHADES
8 ft. Width, 6 ft. Length
Complete with Pulley.
D i f I'm... I III
uur Desr yuaiiry. rinai vaii: y q
CHILDREN'S SHOES
270 pair children's and girls' f
summer shoes.
MANY STYLES, SIZE AVi CHILDREN, THROUGH
SIZES 3 GIRLS!
Op
CO
Women's Cotton Skirts
Our entire stock of summer
skirts going at one low price.
BIG ASSORTMENT! BE THE EARLY BIRD!
PP
oO
MEN'S SUMMER HATS
Dress Styles Western Styles,
all reduced to one price.
STRAWS and STRAW COMBINATIONS!
44
BOYS' SUMMER SHIRTS
One large group priced to sell in a
hurry. Ideal for school.
Sizes 8 to 18.
PPc
GIRLS' SUMMER SKIRTS
Prints or Plains, all Better Quality,
r
Marked Down to One Low Price.
OUR GIRLS' DEPT. IS FULL OF ALL KINDS OF BARGAINS.
ppc
O
Women's Summer Dresses
Last call! Entire stock reduced
to One Price!
LADIES! THIS IS YOUR OPPORTUNITY. IT'S
KNOCKING AT YOUR DOOR!
All Women' Summer Shoes
Regardless of former price we
are throwing them out at One
Price.
LEATHERS, MESHES, STRAWS
5 to 9 AA to B!