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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (June 30, 1958)
Q q o 1) G a MAIL TRIBINC, UtfW, reeon, KWiy, June 30. l3f Red Cross Corps Completes Class 9Irs. Clair L. Larson an nounces the completion of a home service training class for Red Croas under the di rection of Mrs. Frank Fair weather, volunteer field con (gultant. These volunteer work erg will sist in the social el&rt arofrem for Jackson ceintja. S3. 93. Iturey, Mrs. Robert De J.oem, Krt. V. P. Nicoletti .M Sfist Chloe Fairweather. tEfce find clas was held at rjt nosne f Mrs. Larson, who vte t chairman of home eio, with Mrs. Sheridan 69 r co-chairman. Season Closed Ey Zonta Club Medford Zonta club held it's last luncheon meeting of the season Thursday at the Jackson hotel. There will be two picnics, one in July and one in August, and meetings will resume in September. Mrs. Blanche Martin, a new member, gave a classifi cation talk concerning her business which is retail hard ware. She is with Coast to Coast Stores. . Mrs. Jean Fish told of the reports which were given by the five girls from Medford who attended Girls State in Salem recently. The Zonta club annually pay the ex penses of one delegate to the meeting. i Mrs. Dora Gates is chair man of the July picnic which will be held at the home of Mrs. Edith Gifford. WHETHER YOU ARE HOMJEMAKER STUDENT OR CAREER GIRL Picture a charming, glorious, more successful YOU! Sound too good to be true? It isn't! Nancy Taylor's Success Course helps you quickly learn the secrets of cosmetic application figure control fashion grooming modeling etiquette speech and conversation hair styling self-improvement personality de velopment. nancy taylor . FIWISHIBS SCHOOL & MODELING STUDIO 4d North Riverside, MedferW, Ore. Phone P 3-424 VISIT, PHONE, WRITE FOR FREE SELF EVALUATION ANALYSIS floyf &)( JptogiclOing 'An emezine new elajtic back of Anoset fabric clings gently . . . i sever slips down or rides up, no matter how active you are. -1J L I T 1 1 .1 r 1.1 .mu, wsvuuw 11 Gives you an inch designed contour (comfort jill daylong. UEDFORD POUNDATIONS flBCOND FLOOR Rainwear Man Shower Down Br FAY PAULEY UPI Women's Editor New York (UPI) It never rains but it pours new orders in to the nation's rainwear manufacturers. The industry is so happy with current sales one CA1irA nnlUJ 4U t-T a. a ft that they want to keep the pace, even better it, for fall. So they're showering down with new styles designed to make my old slicker as out moded as the shoulder length bob. One manufacturer, Law rence of London, even makes a mink-lined raincoat, the most expensive I've found on the market. It retails for $800. The outer layer is of water repellent silk in grey, beige, red or mocha. Two Purpose Coat The unusually cool and damp season in many sections of the country created a "fan tastic late spring season," said Esther Willens of the National Rainwear Manufacturers asso ciation. But the seasonal gain is only part of the story. She said there had been a sales growth annually as manufac turers put new stress on styl ing and brought out the dual purpose coat-water repellent, but of topcoat fabrics. Or some of velveteen and silk - double for evening wraps. The association's president. Simon Cohen, told a recent dinner meeting of members that "raincoaL. are outselling iMciiwll- 1 1 uuui iajr in piace, me irom stays nigner. more uplift than other strapless bras. Specially cups shape you naturally, keep you in heavenly In white only. 32A-38C. $5.95. MtClh lOWkawMkmCnM ufacturers New Styles regular coats." "You just name the fabric and we'll make it shed water," said Norman Lawrence of the firm bearing his name. Law rence added, "I test some .of the new materials in the shower at home, before they go into the line." Will See Manr Fabrics I Fabrics for fall include flan nels, wool jersies, jacquards, narrow and wide wale cordu roys, . gabardines, silk broad cloths and taffetas, challis, and a new imported material which looks sleek as a wet seal. Lawrence has an evening raincoat of gold lame" for snob appeal." Helen Van Vliet, a one-time opera singer in Europe, uses fiber blends. One is a 20 per I cent wool, 80 per cent orlon combination. This designer, who turned to coats some eight years ago, features fake fur trims and linings on wide wale corduroys in black, red, beige and blonde. And several manufacturers line with a deep pile alpaca. Prints, some of them giant florals on a black background, and plaids both subtle and bold run throughout the col lections. Lawrence puts huge roses on a black velveteen. Miss Van Vliet has one print repeating "Paris" all 1 over. The, influence of the chem ise silhouette is small in the rainwear industry because its narrow lines do not fit com fortably over a suit or bulky dress. But Miss Van Vliet uses both the high-waisted empire and spacious trapeze lines for fall. Townsend Auxiliary Announces Meeting Townsend Harmony auxil iary will meet Wednesday, July 2, for a routine session and plans will be made to have a picnic in July. At last week's club meet ing the Washington D.C. Flash was read by Mrs. Ida Kelly and A. W. Ellison. Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Naffziger furnish ed music for dancing. Visitors are welcome to the meetings, held every Wednes day at Carpenter's hall. IfroowlAltol' WM SS.fS 4m ' OOM MMitlLU 1 4 I- I Tradtmark for Antania Mills Fabric . Restaurant Advertises In Reverse Chicago (UPI) "Hello," said a nearty male voice, may we help you with to night's dinner? "For the main dish, we sug gest Swedish meatballs in sour cream, surrounded by a ring of broad noodles. Your salad could be a simple head of let tuce with French dressing. "A tasty side dish is baby lima beans. Serve the meal with whole wheat bread. For dessert, we advise warm ap ple pie with cheddar cheese." This message, to the har rassed homemaker, is a bless ing. To a restaurant chain in Chicago (Harding's), it is re verse advertising which pays off. The service consists of one meal suggestion a day, very rarely duplicated. It explains how an ordinary dish can be made different and exciting, j Working Wives ' 1 The restaurant has received 2,183,000 calls since the pro gram was installed in 1955, saio John Harding, grandson of the founder of the chain. That's about 3,000 per day. "The callers are largely married working girls," Hard ing explained, "because they have a job and don't have the time to think ahead." "We also help housewives get away from, the expected," he said, "since they tend to fall into a pattern when they learn what their husbands like to eat. The service is good for career girls in entertain ing, and for young brides who are stuck for ideas." Har dim?-realizes he is prac ticing a feig "don't" in adver tising principle telling the housewife how to eat well at home. "But the system works," he said, "because it makes our name familiar. When the housewife finally does go out tc eat, she has been more or less brainwashed into coming to us." -4 Roxy Ann HEC To Hold Meeting Roxy Ann Home Economics club will meet Wednesday, July 2, at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Glen Rader, 1428 Crown avenue. Co-hostess will be Mrs. R. J. Ritchey. v. Hit MfHfl4 I tw hmdf4t ef ft altic Irmdt bra Alfcuquerque Says Chemise By BOB LAWRENCE United Press International Albuquerque, N. M. (UPI) The chemise won't last, long because it caught on "too fast" says a designer of unique dresses. "Women used to dress to please their men. Now they dress only to please them selves. They've stopped look ing like girls," said Mrs. Jean nette Pave. She designs "fies ta" dresses, or squaw-style fashions adapted from Indian wear. "The chemise has caught on too fast to last," she said. "If a style is different, some wom en will buy it for that reason, Of course, the chemise can be lovely,, but it takes a perfect Master Point Date Announced By Bridge Club Camp White Camp White Veterans Bridge club has an nounced that the July master point play will be held July 11, instead of July 4, the regu larly scheduled time. No play will be held July 4, due to holiday activities. A small group gathered for play June 27. Play was by the Howell Movement and winners were Mrs. Paul Hat- ton and Mrs. J. J. Dougherty, first, 66 V; the Berg Martens second, 53; Mrs. Frank R Baker and Mrs. Jack Love third, 52: D. H. Barber and R. Barber, fourth, 50 V points, Mrs. Jack Barr and Mrs. N B. Wright, Grants Pass, were guest players. Winners for the June 20 session were Mrs. Yvonne Dalen and Arthur Scarseth first, 53; Mrs. Fred Purdin and William Hickey, second 52V2: Mrs. Thomas Randall and Mr. Randall, third, 52 Mr. McMasters and Mr. Rus sell, fourth, 51 V2. North-south winners for play June 13 were Robert Dickey and Raymond Wise, first, 139 points; Mrs. Hatton and Al Gilhousen, second, 129Vi; Mrs. Alto Pruitt and Mr. Hatton, third, 116; Mrs. George Dean and Mrs. Randall tied with Mrs. Dougherty and E. K. Ricker for fourth and fifth. East-west winners that eve ning were Mrs. Sam Richard son and Mrs. W. W. Steven son, first, 140; Mr. and Mrs Leland Clark, second, 140; Mrs. Fred Rehling and Wil liam Hickey, third, 131Vi; Walter Humes and Roy Pruitt, fourth, 128 Vz. Class Planned In Citizenship Crater Lake chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, announced today that a class in citizenship will begin Thursday, July 3, at the home of Mrs. G. Q. D'Albini, 308 North Ivy street. The class will be in two sections, one to meet in the afternoon at 2 p.m. and a second in the evening at 7:30 o'clock. Mrs. D'Albini will be in structor, and no charge will be made for either instruction or material. , Classes for the foreign born who wish to become citizens of the United States have been conducted in Medford by the DAR chapter and Mrs. D'Albini for about 30 years. Oregano and Tomato Makes Tasty Salad If you are looking for a new salad flavor, season to matoes with the herb, ore gano. Wash and cut two to matoes into four crosswise slices each. Combine one-half teaspoon salt, one-fourth tea spoon ground black pepper, one-eighth teaspoon garlic powder, one teaspoon crum bled whole oregano, two tablespoons each of olive oil, and wine vinegar. Sprinkle over sliced tomaatoes. Serve as a vegetable or as a salad on lettuce with slices of red sweet onion. Makes four ser vings. ROBERTSON SCHOOL OF 40 N. Riverside Medford, Oregon SP 3-4264 Summer Term Beginning July 7, 1958 - DAY SCHOOL SCHEDULE 8:00 Beg. Typewriting 9:00 Accounting 1-2 IBM Key Punch . Beg. Typewriting Dictation. 10:00 Shorthand 1. IBM Key Punch Beg. Typewriting Speedwriting 11:00 Business Law 1 IBM Key Punch Business Math 1:00 SpeedBuilding IBM-Key Punch SpeedBuilding Office Pract. . 2:00 Bus. Machines IBM Key Punch Bus. English. Letter Writing -3:00 Bus. Machines IBM Key Punch j typewriting 2-3-4 Typewriting! - Designer Won't Last figure to wear it. But then, the figure can't be seen," she added. A Hobby The Palish-Born artist-de signer, 46, closed down what was left of her Warsaw dress design firm during World War II. She arrived in this coun try in 1944. Seven years ago, she began to adapt the ancient Indian style squaw dresses of velvet to lightweight fabrics. The business began as a hobby. Then her friends or dered the dresses. Now she sells the outfits in 48 states, Canada and Europe. "My big moment came last summer," said this defender of the well-outline shape. "People on the Italian and French coasts 1 raved about these American 'imports' made by a European export. "And they liked them be cause they didn't look copied," she added. "I had to explain they are like a cocktail . a little of this and that. The spirit is Indian, the design American-Polish, with Swiss braid and American fabrics." Full-Skirt For the hobbled citizenry still skirting the shimmy, the fiesta dress nips a lady at the waist, clings to the bodice and blossems out at the hem. Skirts have up to 18 yards of material and are worn over as many as half a dozen petti coats. Materials range from cordu roy for winter to bleached muslin for summer. " The Swiss-made braid, designed by Mrs. Pave, is copied by ric rac factories and then sewed on the , dress. She has used miles, of braid on special de signs. The designer warned that u.- fiesta dress is like any other style. "Not everyone can wear it well. More women would be better dressed if they looked at themselves in a mirror, in stead of following fashion magazine pages alone," she said. Central Point Corps To Aid Medford Group With Party at Camp Central Point--At. the last meeting of Central Point Women's Relief corps, held at the home of Mrs. Bessie Hen derson, Gold Hill, the groups voted to assist Medford Mili tary Order of Lady Bugs in giving a party at Camp White. It will be held during July. The members also planned to make or obtain a chart of the Central Point cemetery in order that veteran's graves may be located more readily. Mrs. John Foster was appoint ed to secure information on this matter, and she will ap preciate information on the location of the graves of vet erans buried in the cemetery. Two candidates will be in itiated at the next meeting, to be held in Central Point American Legion hall July 22. They are Mrs. Mable Good win, Gold Hill, and Miss Flora Moore, Medford. Visitors at the last meet ing were Mrs. Madge Dor- man, Mrs. Maybell Raines, Mrs. Goodwin and Deena Griggs. Calendar Calendar notices and news for the society section of The Mai Tribune must be submitted in writing and deadline for the Sun day ediUon is 1 p.m. rnaay. ueaa line for the weekly calendar is 9 a.m. of the day of publication and for week day news is 5 p.m. the day before publication. Monday: 7:30 p.m. - Medford Rose society, courthouse auditori um. Tuesday: 10:45 a.m. Christian Women's Fellowship, First Christian church, at church. 12 noon Medford chapter of the Gold. Star Mothers, Hawthorne park. Saute mushrooms and on ions in olive oil and lemon juice and add to steak before serving. 630 S.E. Jackson, Roieburg, Oregon OR 3-7256 0 Off - Beat Wall Decor Predicted By MARY PRIME United Press International New York (UPI) Pic tures are becoming the wall flowers of home decorating, says a merchandising coordin ator. Instead of framed pictures, designers this year will give us such off-beat wall decor as stained glass panels, 45 by 65- inch scrolls, plaques, and cer amic tiles. Even mirrors will be decorated with plaques, says Emily Gordon, who works with interior designers in the United States and Eu rope. She helps adapt their designs into more than 4,000 pieces of contemporary furni ture and accessories for Ray mor, a home furnishing dis tributor. "There's a growing trend for wall decor as a color ac cent rather than the actual representation of a painting. People want big, bold pieces to blanket the wall as the focal point of a room," said Miss Gordon in an interview. Glass to Divide Rooms She predicted that stained glass will be put on walls, mirrors, and picture windows and used in screens and room dividers. The glass panels, which will be on the market this fall, come in abstract designs, still life, landscapes, and Ameri cana. Other decorations include reproductions of primitive ceremonial figures done in bronze and mounted on wood; large ceramic butterflies on wood; plaques of chipped mo saic; and surf-board shaped walnut plaques. "It's part of a trend to the hand-crafted look, unusual yet functional 1 urnisnings, and emphasis on color, sur face, and texture instead 01 silhouette, said Miss Gordon. Colors will be brighter this year, she predicted. Top shades are mauve, all tones of blue, green, turquoise, and orange. More wood will be used in accessories and walnut will be the most popular wood. Modern furniture will be come softer, less stark and cold, she said. Writer Defines American Look Chicago (UPI) Just what is this thing called "the American look?" Ask the American man who has seen.U.S. women away from home. Some will say hpr clothes are more expen sive, she looks more tailored or that her tastes are less complex than those of Euro pean women. Englishmen say she's guid ed by the typical American craving for function-first. A A Frenchmen will ten you she has a casual appeal, as opposed to the studied chic of his countrywomen. The H. W. Gossard Co., a foundation garment manu facturer, recently completed a survev on the subject; It found that our fashions fol low the tradition of our heri tage a combination of in fluences from many 'Cultures. The average well-dressed American woman gets a tweedy, tailored look from the British, flair and styling from Orientals and originality from Italians, the survey showed. Abroad, American women are considered relaxed and casually confident, with fig ures well controlled by 'cor sets, diets and exercise. The survey also found we are not the world's greatest beauties, but we make the most of what we have. 4 Summer Dessert Spoon ' watermelon balls, chilled in Rose wine that's been lightly sweetened with sugar and sharpened with fresh lemon juice, into sherbet-type glasses. Serve gener ously of the delicious liquid, Sip the refreshing beverage, then eat the crisp melon. BUSINESS 411 Main Klamath Falls, Oregon TU 2-4126 Two Attend Convention Mrs. Maxine (Paul R.) Smith, Madrona lane, left Portland Friday for Cleve land, Ohio, where she is at tending the annual conven tion of National Education association. Mrs. Smith , is president-elect o f Oregon Education association. Today Mrs. Smith was slated to give a talk before the Department of. Classroom teachers of the national as sociation which would nomi nate Ewald Turner, Pendle ton, for the presidency of the department. Mr. Turner has served as national vice-president the past year. James McDonald, Medford, president of the Student Na tional Education association, is also in Cleveland for the national meeting. Friday night he will be one of four students to interview James B. Conant, former president of Harvard univer sity, on the ABC-TV network program, College News Con ference. The panel discussion will be moderated by Ruth Gen Hagy and kinescoped for telecast Sunday. July 6. This will be the final general ses sion of the NEA convention. Speakers at the NEA ses sion included Cliford C. Furnas, chancellor of the Uni versity of Buffalo and form erly assistant secretary of de fense for research and de your ev 11 in brilliant tropicol colors -- .y' . Nii for Sime. shirts regularly st lVids at $1 Color-fast, cool pre-shnmic or Sanforized cottons. Norrow and wide stripes in pink, gold and copen. Solids in white, red, black, pink, maize, turquoise. Polka-dots in red, block, copen blue and pink shades. Blouson, tuck-in, in-and-out styles in sizes 32 fo 38. velopment, and Max Lerner, professor of American civili zation at Brandeis university. ixew xork post columnist and author of the current best seller, "America as a Civili zation." Also on the convention pro gram are showings of the NEA-state association film, "Crowded Out" as well as a special presentation of a play written and performed for the association by the Ameri can Theater Wing Community Players. Mrs. Smith, who is attend ing summer session at the University of Oregon, will re turn to Eugene July 5. o Nutritionist Advises On Frozen Vegetables Fargo, N. D. rupn The trick in freezing aspara gus and other vegetables for winter meals is to make sure tne vegetables are as free of water as possible. Ruth Dawson, a nutrition ist for North Dakota Stnf College Extension service said vegetables such as asparagus must be pre-cooked and then placed in cold watert When cool, they must be drained well on absorbent necer or towels to remove the vster. wer vegetable ciu ice crystals to form urin th freezing, producing en infer ior UUUUCk now havevceSdr each t