Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989, July 21, 1958, Image 2

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2 MAIL TRIBUNE, Medford, Oregon, Monday, July 21. 1958
,J.
Miss Pauleile Jardine (at right) in her Hawaiian muu muu
and lei, presents an interesting contrast to Miss Pat Bigham
in cotton pedal pushers and striped cotton blouse, typical
clothing worn by Rogue valley teenagers in the summer time.
Miss Jardine and her mother, Mrs. John Jardine (at left)
with Mr. Jardine are guests in Medford of Mr. and Mrs. John
Mansfield, 1615 Crater Lake avenue. Mrs. Mansfield honored
the visitors at a coffee Friday morning at her home, and
Mrs. Jardine spoke for a meetinq of Medford Travel Study
club last Tuesday. The Jardines. on a two month's tour of the
United Stales, plan to remain in the valley for the opening
q night performance of the Oregon Shakespearean festival be
fore going to San Francisco. Mr. Jardine, business manager
of Hilo Memorial and Puumaile hospitals on the Island of
Hawaii, is a member of the Hilo Junior Chamber of Com
merce, and his wife, a sales clerk for Fl Kaehnen Ltd.. is a
member of the Hilo Jayceettes. of Hilo Business and Profes
sional Women's club. Lady Elks, and Mauna Kea chapter.
Companions of the Forest, a fraternal organization. Miss
Jardine, a high school student, explained that muus muus
are worn as lounging or party clothing, and during Aloha
days are worn everywhere. There are many variations of the
muu muu.
o Girl Scout Camp Low Echo
Has Vacancies for Session
The third camping session
at Girl Scout camp, Low
Echo, will open Friday, July
25, at Lake of the Woods.
Several vacancies still remain
in general units for the 10-
day session, and registration
forms and health cards may
be obtained at the Girl Scout
office, 500 East Main street.
Campers for the third ses
. ion will gather at the Grey
hound bus garage, Fourth and
Apple streets, at noon. Buses
depart at 12:30 p.m. Any fees
not already paid or health
cards not previously sent in
may be turned in at that time.
All girls going into the fifth
grade in the fall or older are
eligible, whether or not they
are registered Girl Scouts.
Vacancies also remain for
the fourth session, which is
from August 5 to August 15
Scheduled activities at camp
include swimming, boating,
hiking, outdoor cookouts,
basketry, clay modeling,
sketching, impromptu drama
tics, nature walks and sing
ing.
Guests at Camp Low Echo
this summer will include the
Irish Ranger team, four sen
ior guides from Dublin, who
are visiting the Council under
the auspices of the Juliette
Lowe World Friendship fund.
The girls will go to camp
August 3, to attend the last
Club Announces
Representative
Mrs. Elsa Walker has been
appointed to represent Med
ford Business and Profession
al Women on the Jackson
County Council for the Aging.
The 'last meeting of the
club was a picnic held Thurs
day at Hawthorne park.
At a business meeting
plans were made for a picnic
to be held on Sunday, AuguSt
17 at 1 p.m. at the Grants
Pass City park for members
and their families. Each fam
ily attending is asked to take
potluck picnic food and table
service. Mrs. Nell Faulkner f
was appointed chairman with
Mrs. Muriel Shortridge an
Mrs. Ruth Simmons assisting.
4
Red Cross Names
Nursing Director
Jackson County chapter of
the American Red Cross n
nounces the appointment JP
Mrs. Thomas J. Williams,
1317 Queen Anne avenue,
director of nursing services.
The chapter is makin
every effort possible to set up
continuous classes in "Home
Care of the Sick and Injured"
and "Mother and Baby Car."
The present goal of the Na
tional Red Cross and Civil De
fense is to train at least one
member in every family in
these courses which are of- J
fered at no cost.
evenings campfire of the
third session, and will remain
for several days into the last
session. Prior to and follcw
ing their stay at camp, the
Rangers will be entertained
in private homes throughout
the Rogue Valley Girl Scout
council's jurisdiction.
Chairman
Asks Entries
For Pageant
Richard Lamont, chairman
of the Miss Jackson County
pageant, to be held August
21-24 at the Medford armory
in conjunction with the Kiwa
nis County fair, announces
that his group is in search of
a number of "local beauties"
to participate in the pageant,
Mr. Lamont asks that Jack
son county residents who
know a "personable, beauti-
ful and talented young lady
between 17 and 27 years of
age" to contact him. Winner
of the Miss Jackson County
pageant will be crownd by
Miss America and will com
pete at Seaside, Ore., for the
title of Miss Oregon.
Mr. Lamont states that to
be eligible for the pageant, a
contestant must be between
17 and 27 years of age on
September 1. She must be a
high school graduate, must
never have been married (or
had a marriage ceremony an
nulled). She must possess tal
ent, trained or potential, such
as the ability to play a musi
cal instrument,, give a dra
matic presentation, or sing,
or have talent or training in
any of the fine arts.
Every contestant must be
sponsored by an organization
or individual. A $10 entrance
fee will be charged to help
defray expenses of the proj
ect. Entry blanks were pub
lished in the July 20 edition
of The Mail Tribune or may
be obtained from Mr. Lamont.
Entries are to be mailed to
the Medford Junior Chamber
of Commerce, P.O. Box 251,
Medford. August 15 is the
closing date.
Use your Jackson county
library this summer for infor
nsation, recreation and educa
tion. The library has books on
summer sports, gardening, va
cation travel, hobbies and
hundreds of other subjects.
Periodical indexes at the
Jackson County library will
help you locate magazine ar
ticles on virtually every sub
feet. Add a pinch of poultry sea
soning to waffle batter when
topping the waffles with
creamed chicken or turkey.
Visitor Speaks
For Travel Club
Guest speaker for the last
meeting of Medford Travel
Study club, held Tuesday at
the home of Mrs. Beryl Lyon,
was Mrs. John Jardine, Hilo,
Hawaii. Mrs. Jardine, her hus
band and daughter, Paulette,
are guests of Mr. and Mrs.
John Mansfield. 1615 Crater
Lake avenue. Mr. Jardine is
business manager of Hilo
Memorial and Puumaile hos
pitals on the Island of Hawaii.
The Jardines are complet
ing a tour of the United
States. Both the Jardines and
their daughter have lived all
their lives in Hawaii.
Mrs. Jardine spoke to the
club about the customs of the
natives and of the Aloha fes
tival in October. Part of the
festival is the Fire Goddess
sacrifice which takes place at
the rim of Kilauea crater,
said to be the home of Pele
the goddess.
A dish made from the mon
key pod tree which was plant
ed by Mark Twain in 1866
was one of the articles Mrs.
Jardine displayed. Miss Jar
dine, 16, modeled a number
of muu muus. One she ex
plained was a "grandmother
muu muu" or tutu muu which
translated means "big bag."
The next meeting of Travel
Study club will be at the
Mansfield home August 26 at
10 a.m.
Visitors Attend
Weekly Session
Of Duplicate Club
Visitors at the last regular
session of the Medford dupli
cate bridge club were Mr. and
Mrs. Loren Scott of Santa
Maria, Calif.
T. J. Fuson and George
Rode were first with 151
points in the north-south posi
tion and Mr. and Mrs. Leland
Clark, with 13 11 points,
were first in the east-west
position.
Other winners in the north
south position were Mrs.
Frank Baker and Berg Mar
ten, second, 150 points; Mrs.
Richard Milestone and Mrs.
Tom Randall, third, 137
points; and Miss Isobel Stu
art and Mrs. George Rode,
fourth, 128 points.
Winning east-west were Mrs.
A. W. Lingaas and Mrs. John
Dougherty who tied with Al
Gilhousen and Ray Wise for
second with 124V points; and
Mrs. Robert Elliott and Rob
ert Dickey, . fourth, 122V2
points.
Three Leave . -
Mr. and Mrs. William W.
Crabb, 441 North First street,
Central Point, and : their
granddaughter, Louise Koski,
also of Central Point, left
Sunday for Portland on a
business trip. From there they
continue on an extended va
cation jip.
The brine from sweet pick
les gives potato salad a de
licious flavor and can be sub
stituted for vinegar.
Calendar
Calendar notices and news for
the society section of The Mail
Tribune must be submitted in
writing and deadline for the Sun
day edition is 1 p.m. Friday. Dead
line for the weekly calendar is 9
a.m. of the day of publication and
for week day news is S p.m. the
day before publication.
Monday:
6:30 p.m. Medford Toast
mistress club, home of Mrs.
Harry Marshall, 1028 Win
chester ave.
8 p.m. Olive Rebekah
lodge, Odd Fellows hall, 221
West Sixth st.
Tuesday:
10 a.m. Kiwanian Dames
coffee, home of Mrs. Ronald
E. Rice, 215 Saginaw dr.
10 a.m. Rogue Valley
Navy Mothers, TouVelle park.
10:30 ajn. Woman's So
ciety of Christian Service,
First Methodist church, with
Mrs. Eugene Ray, Ross lane.
12 noon Elta Deuel Hubbs
tent picnic, Hawthorne park.
12:30 p.m. Christian Wom
en's fellowship, First Chris
tian church, circle 2, with
Mrs. M. E. Olson, 764 Pitt
view ave., Central Point; cir
cle 3, with Mrs. C. Hershieser,
1255 Sweet rd.
1 p.m. Christian Women's
fellowship, First Christian
church, circle 1, with Mrs.
Ruby Hicks, 1001 Murrey
ave.; circle 4, with Mrs. May
Ayers, 722 West Fourth St.;
circle 6, with Mrs. Alice Da
vis, 1112 East Main st.
1:30 p.m. Rogue Valley
Herb society, home of Mrs.
Leo Thomas, 3646 .Calhoun
rd.
OVERWEIGHT?
RORY
CALHOUN
suggests
Aydss
"Trim off excess weight with the
Ayds Plan," says Kory. Taken as
directed before meals, Ayds euros
your appetite. You automatically
eat less lose pounds. Ayds
npw in chocolate fudge-type and
vanilla caramel. Money back
guarantee. A Month's Supply $3.25
CENTRAL DRUG
134 East Main, Medford
Candidate
Announced '
Prospect Miss Sally Jo
McKillop, one of the candi
dates for queen of the annual
Prospect Jamboree, is a na
tive of Oregon and has lived
all her life in Prospect. The
jamboree will be held July
26-27. ,
Miss McKillop, a black
haired brunette, is sophomore
queen yell leader for Pros
pect High school. She says
she likes rare steak, swim
ming and Elvis Presley.
The candidate, a daughter
cf Mr. and Mrs. Archie Mc
Killop, is sponsored by the
Prospect Lions auxiliary.
Bake fresh tomatoes in
cream or "grill them over the
barbecue or picnic fire. Slice
tomatoes into shallow baking
dish or foil pan and sprinkle
with instant minced onion,
salt and a little nutmeg. Pour
over some heavy cream (about
Vz cup is right for 4 large to
matoes); dot with butter. Bake
or grill until tomatoes are
tender. Look for moisture-free
onion in jars or foil packets
at your grocers.
-jPj LEON'S and LEON'S
Sensational
Savings On
Children's
Clothes!
''Girls'
Right Out of Regular Stocks . . . Sizes .
1 to 6 ... 7 to 14 and Sub-Teen!
1199
3
"Girls' Dusters and Coats"
Many Less Than Vz Price to Clear . . .
Infants Thru 14 Sizes
3
"Girls' Sportswear"
Pedal Pushers . 2.49 "s Suils"
All Sizes
Jackets ..... 2.49
Blouses ..... 1.49
Skirts . : ; : . 2.99
"Boys' Sportswear"
sh!ri I da "Boys' Caps"
Willi 1W ... aw
Slax 2.49
T-Shirts ...... .99
Crawlers 1.49
"Children's Shoes"
Washable Canvass
Play Shoes
and Leather Sandals
Leons Tofs
105
249
GALA GOWN Miss Jean Car
ter. 1958 Maid of Cotton, wears
a lavish ball grown by Macola
of Zurich, Switzerland. Appli
qued flowers and jewels deco
rate, the cotton organdy gown
styled with the peacock sil
houette. More than 500,000 people
visited the New York State
Fair at Syracuse in 1957.
Dresses"
99
Vz Off
"Robes"
'30l!
49c
"Boys' Suits"
'5.99
Dress and
- tb - Teens
Main
u n P aiore wiae
J jy 0t0! Savings Event!
0i0- Thousand 0f Dollars Worth of
Beautiful Merchandise Goes on Sab it Drastic Reductions!
"""" Buy How and Save On All Your Shoes and Clothing Heeds!
p VHDHMIUHflBIHHHHflflHHIIIIIHIHHiflHIlHiHHiiflHflHilli
j99
6"
School Shoes!
099
and99
Recipe for Yoghurt Provided
Corvallis Tart, smooth
textured yoghurt, a fermented
milk product that Turks and
Arabs thrive on, can be made
cheaply and easily at home.
Yoghurt has the consistency
of cultured sour cream or
heavy salad dressing, but few
er calories.
Roy Stein, superintendent
of the Oregon State college
dairy products laboratory,
provides this recipe for home
made yoghurt.
Ingredients: 1 quart of -homogenized,
pasteurized milk
or fresh raw whole milk; 23
cup instant soluble skim milk
powder; commercial yoghurt
or a starter from a previous
yoghurt, batch; and a candy
thermometer.
Procedure: Mix the instant
soluble skim milk powder
with the quart of milk and
heat in a double boiler to just
under boiling temperature.
Keep hot for 30 minutes. Cool
to 110-115 degrees.
Add 1 tablespoon of yog
hurt culture.
Pour mixture into sterilized
wide mouth jelly glasses.
Place glasses in a pan of
Beautiful
Summer
Drastically
99 99 11
O (0
Values to 10.99 to24.95
Spring and Summer
Suits and Coals!
1095 149519
Values to
Costume Summer
Jewelry Bags
to Si 21
Off 6"
Cotton Pajamas Nylon Pants
Famous Make Plain or Fancy
3" 59'
Cotton Dusters and Robes
One big
99 ,. .
4
wasn and
fabrics
water kept at 110-115 degrees.
To maintain even tempera
tures, insert the candy ther
mometer in the pan, place in
low oven with door open.
Stein says that if the tem
perature drops, longer incu
bation will be needed, but if
the temperature rises the or
ganism may be killed, and the
mixture' will not ferment.
Cover and let stand at this
temperature for 5 to 6 hours.
Milk should have a firm curd,
at the end of this time.
Refrigerate and chill. Makes
2Vz pints.
Homogenized milk makes a
heavier bodied, smoother tex
tured yoghurt than natural
milk, Stein says.
It isn't practical to make
yoghurt at home, Mr. Stein
feels, unless the homemaker
has time to make it, and the
family likes and eats a lot of
it. Cost of making IV2. pints
is about 35 cents. Other uses
suggested for the health food
are as low calorie salad dress
ing or garnish for vegetables.
The "horns" of the South
American horned frog are ac
tually its upper eye-lids.
Dresses
Reduced to
95
49.95
rack
-7. 09
iron I rl
0"
Club to CeeJbrcro.
Birthdays in July
Townsend club members
having July birthdays -rill be
honored with a birthday cake,
Wednesday, July 23, accord
ing " tq the club president,
Leon Rusho. A program will
follow the business meeting.
At - last weeks auxiliary
meeting, two visitors were
present. A short business ses
sion was followed by readings
and a song by a guest of the
group. The meeting closed
with a penny drill and music.
Visitors "are welcome to all
Townsend club meetings:
Only 35 per cent of the na
tion's eggs are from flocks of
more than 400 birds.
STUDENTS, CAIEER GIRLS, HOUSEWIVES;
TEENAGERS
What are Glamour Girls Made Of?
You'll Find the Answers in the
NANCY TAYLOR GLASS
Tuesday, July 22 7:00 to 10:00 p.m.
v ENROLL NOW
NANCY TAYLOR CHARM & MODELING COURSE
42 North Riversidt. SP 3-6408 Medford, Or.
Lovely ffjrlr
Summer iinu
Big Selectiin of Colors and Sizes
99
tillHU
Formerly 6.98
Beautiful Coordinates!
An Outstanding Saving
99
Blouses and T-Shirts
Nationally Known Brands
2
to
Capri Pants!
Dozens to Select From
3
Also Drastic Reductions on
Hundreds of Pairs of Shoes!
Parker Woods'
21 N. CENTRAL
Poached Egi In 8 Spin
Here's a neat trick for a
very special cook who likes
and deserves compliments.
Choose a saucepan that's at
least 8 inches deep. Fill it 23
full of water and bring it to
a fast rolling boil. Add one
tablespoon of vinegar to the
water. Break all the eggs you
want to poach into a bowl.
With a long-handled spoon,
stir the water rapidly until
a deep swirling funnel forms
in the center. Drop the eggs
quickly into the swirl, cover
the saucepan immediately and
turn off the flame. After five
minutes, use a slotted spoon
to fish out the perfect, oval
shaped eggs and be prepared
for applause.
Jl I99
fo 10.98
99
o
2
m w